PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Support for parents with infants at pediatric check-ups leads to better reading and math skills in elementary school

2025-12-15
(Press-News.org) Guiding parents to have pretend play and read aloud with their babies increased parental support of their children’s cognitive development and academic skills by the time they turned six—especially for families facing poverty.

This is the finding of a new study, led by researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York University, and the University of Pittsburgh, which evaluated the effects of a comprehensive model to support parenting.

Called Smart Beginnings, the approach combines PlayReadVIP (formerly Video Interaction Project) at pediatric check-ups from birth to age 3, in which parents watch themselves on video reading or playing together with a new book or toy to foster skills that support children’s development. The second approach is called Family Check-Up in the home, which uses a clinical family management strategies to address difficult child behaviors and other challenges, especially among families facing adversity such as maternal depression.

For the study, 403 mothers and newborns with low incomes in New York City and Pittsburgh enrolled, and half were randomly assigned to receive Smart Beginnings while the rest received standard pediatric primary care.

Analysis of the program, published in Pediatrics online December 15, 2025, showed that increases in cognitive stimulation from videorecorded interactions of parents and children playing at age two resulting from the Smart Beginnings comprehensive model in turn resulted in better academic skills when children reached the first grade.   

These findings expand upon earlier work showing similar findings at age four, before children had started elementary school.

Our findings demonstrate that early preventive intervention through Smart Beginnings can result in long-standing impacts in elementary school, even three years after completion of the program,” said study lead investigator Elizabeth B. Miller, PhD, an assistant professor in the Department of Population Health at NYU Langone Health. “Importantly, the SB model provides these services at far lower cost than other approaches with similar goals.”

According to Miller, the results of this study are critically important for early childhood policy. Findings represent one of the first demonstrations of feasibility and impact for tiered approaches to achieve population-level impacts, providing strong evidence to support recent recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. Findings additionally provide strong support for ongoing implementation and scaling of SB’s composite programs - PlayReadVIP and Family Check-Up.

Funding for the study was provided by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development of the National Institutes of Health, grant R01HD076390.

Besides Miller, other NYU study investigators are Principal Investigators Pamela Morris-Perez and Alan L. Mendelsohn, MD, together with Caitlin F. Canfield, PhD; Ashleigh I. Aviles, PhD; and Erin Roby, PhD. University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania investigators are Principal Investigator Daniel S. Shaw, PhD, together with Leah J. Hunter, PhD.   

Media Inquiries:

Sasha Walek

646-501-3873

Sasha.walek@nyulangone.org

 

 

 

###
 

About NYU Langone Health

NYU Langone Health is a fully integrated health system that consistently achieves the best patient outcomes through a rigorous focus on quality that has resulted in some of the lowest mortality rates in the nation. Vizient, Inc. has ranked NYU Langone No. 1 out of 118 comprehensive academic medical centers across the nation for four years in a row, and U.S. News & World Report recently ranked four of its clinical specialties number one in the nation. NYU Langone offers a comprehensive range of medical services with one high standard of care across seven inpatient locations, its Perlmutter Cancer Center, and more than 320 outpatient locations in the New York area and Florida. The system also includes two tuition-free medical schools, in Manhattan and on Long Island, and a vast research enterprise.

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Kids’ behavioral health is a growing share of family health costs

2025-12-15
Mental health, substance use, and other behavioral health care made up 40% of all health expenditures for U.S. children in 2022, according to a new study by researchers at UC San Francisco. That is almost twice what it was in 2011. The costs to families for this type of care grew more than twice as fast as the costs for other types of medical care. Out-of-pocket spending on behavioral health rose an average of 6.4% each year for families, compared with 2.7% for non-behavioral health care. “Families are bearing growing costs,” ...

Day & night: Cancer disrupts the brain’s natural rhythm

2025-12-15
“The brain is an exquisite sensor of what’s going on in your body,” says Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Assistant Professor Jeremy Borniger. “But it requires balance. Neurons need to be active or inactive at the right times. If that rhythm goes out of sync even a little bit, it can change the function of the entire brain.” In mice, the Borniger lab has found that breast cancer disrupts the diurnal, or day-night, rhythms of corticosterone levels. Corticosterone is the primary stress hormone ...

COVID-19 vaccination significantly reduces risk to pregnant women and baby

2025-12-15
Pregnant people who received a COVID-19 vaccine were far less likely to experience severe illness or deliver their babies prematurely, according to a major new UBC-led study published in JAMA.  Drawing on data from nearly 20,000 pregnancies across Canada, the research found that vaccination was strongly associated with lower risks of hospitalization, intensive care admission and preterm birth. These benefits persisted as the virus evolved from the Delta variant to Omicron, which has evolved into newer sublineages that still dominate today.  “Our ...

The role of vaccination in maternal and perinatal outcomes associated with COVID-19 in pregnancy

2025-12-15
About The Study: This study found that vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 prior to and during pregnancy, before COVID-19 diagnosis, was associated with a lower risk of severe maternal disease and preterm birth regardless of variant time period. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Deborah Money, MD, email deborah.money@ubc.ca. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jama.2025.21001) Editor’s Note: Please ...

Mayo Clinic smartwatch system helps parents shorten and defuse children's severe tantrums early

2025-12-15
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Mayo Clinic researchers have developed a smartwatch-based alert system that signals parents at the earliest signs of a tantrum in children with emotional and behavioral disorders — prompting them to intervene before it intensifies.   In a new study published in JAMA Network Open, these alerts helped parents intervene within four seconds and shortened severe tantrums by an average of 11 minutes — about half the duration seen with standard therapy.   In this system, a smartwatch worn by the ...

Behavioral health spending spikes to 40% of all children’s health expenditures, nearly doubling in a decade

2025-12-15
Behavioral health care has surged to represent 40% of all medical expenditures for U.S. children in 2022, nearly doubling from 22% in 2011, according to a new study published in JAMA Pediatrics. Researchers found that pediatric behavioral health expenditures totaled $41.8 billion in 2022, with families paying $2.9 billion out-of-pocket. Most concerning, out-of-pocket costs for children's behavioral health increased at more than twice the rate of other medical expenses, leaving many families struggling with significant financial burden. The study analyzed data on nationally representative spending patterns for ...

Digital cognitive behavioral treatment for generalized anxiety disorder

2025-12-15
About The Study: In this randomized clinical trial, digital cognitive behavioral therapy provided significant and sustained benefits to adults with generalized anxiety disorder. Given the limitations in access to empirically supported cognitive behavioral therapy, an efficacious digital cognitive behavioral therapy program has clear potential for public health benefit. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, E. Marie Parsons, PhD, email mariepar@bu.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.48884) Editor’s Note: Please ...

Expenditures for pediatric behavioral health care over time and estimated family financial burden

2025-12-15
About The Study: Behavioral health expenditures nearly doubled to 40% of U.S. child health spending by 2022. Behavioral health spending was associated with high family financial burden, which reflects increased demand and cost for services and supports expanding access through insurance coverage and clinician availability.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Ashley A. Foster, MD, email ashley.foster@ucsf.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2025.5181) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional ...

Air conditioning in nursing homes and mortality during extreme heat

2025-12-15
About The Study: In this case-crossover study, mortality was lower during extreme heat days in nursing homes with air conditioning (AC) compared to those without AC. These findings suggest that AC provision in nursing homes and other congregate care settings may be important for preventing mortality among older adults during extreme heat days.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Nathan M. Stall, MD, PhD, email nathan.stall@sinaihealth.ca. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2025.6595) Editor’s Note: Please ...

The Alps to lose a record number of glaciers in the next decade

2025-12-15
In brief: In a groundbreaking study, an international team led by ETH Zurich researchers has for the first time calculated how many glaciers worldwide are likely to remain until the end of the century and for how long. Depending on how sharply the planet warms, the study shows that in a scenario with a global temperature rise of +4.0 °C, only about 18,000 glaciers would remain, whereas at +1.5 °C there would be around 100,000. The researchers coined the term, “Peak Glacier Extinction”, the point when annual glacier loss hits its maximum. At +1.5 °C it occurs around 2041 with 2,000 glaciers lost; at +4 °C ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Norbert Holtkamp appointed director of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory

New agentic AI platform accelerates advanced optics design

Biologists discover neurons use physical signals — not electricity — to stabilize communication

Researchers discover that a hormone can access the brain by hitchhiking

University of Oklahoma researcher awarded funding to pursue AI-powered material design

Exploring how the visual system recovers following injury

Support for parents with infants at pediatric check-ups leads to better reading and math skills in elementary school

Kids’ behavioral health is a growing share of family health costs

Day & night: Cancer disrupts the brain’s natural rhythm

COVID-19 vaccination significantly reduces risk to pregnant women and baby

The role of vaccination in maternal and perinatal outcomes associated with COVID-19 in pregnancy

Mayo Clinic smartwatch system helps parents shorten and defuse children's severe tantrums early

Behavioral health spending spikes to 40% of all children’s health expenditures, nearly doubling in a decade

Digital cognitive behavioral treatment for generalized anxiety disorder

Expenditures for pediatric behavioral health care over time and estimated family financial burden

Air conditioning in nursing homes and mortality during extreme heat

The Alps to lose a record number of glaciers in the next decade

What makes a good proton conductor?

New science reporting guide published for journalists in Bulgaria

New international study reveals major survival gaps among children with cancer

New science reporting guide published for journalists in Turkey

Scientists develop a smarter mRNA therapy that knows which cells to target

Neuroanatomy-informed brain–machine hybrid intelligence for robust acoustic target detection

Eight SwRI hydrogen projects funded by ENERGYWERX

The Lundquist Institute and its start-up company Vitalex Biosciences Announces Strategic Advancement of Second-Generation fungal Vaccine VXV-01 through Phase 1 Trials under $40 Million Competitive Con

Fine particles in pollution are associated with early signs of autoimmune disease

Review article | Towards a Global Ground-Based Earth Observatory (GGBEO): Leveraging existing systems and networks

Penn and UMich create world’s smallest programmable, autonomous robots

Cleveland researchers launch first major study to address ‘hidden performance killer’ in athletes

To connect across politics, try saying what you oppose

[Press-News.org] Support for parents with infants at pediatric check-ups leads to better reading and math skills in elementary school