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Your support powers every story we tell. Please help us reach our year-end goal.

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Your support powers every story we tell. We’re committed to producing high-quality, fact-based news and information that gives you the facts in this community we call home. If our work has helped you stay informed, take action, or feel more connected to Windham County we hope you will give now to help us reach our goal of raising $150,000 by December 31st.

Prouty Center steps up outreach to families of newborns

BRATTLEBORO — The Winston Prouty Center for Child Development estimates that its nurses, through BMH. have been involved with 75 percent of the families who have given birth for the first time, assisting with breastfeeding and other services in the home.

According to Winston Prouty Executive Director Chloe Learey, this is an important resource which helps build the strong foundation young children need to be successful.

“The benefits of breastfeeding are well known, but there are other pieces of the development puzzle which are equally important that this type of home-visiting supports,” Learey said. “For instance, helping parents understand how much their baby's brain is growing and why the environment they create matters so much in these early stages.”

Learey said that baby who is quiet in his or her crib all day “may have 'given up' trying to engage with an unresponsive parent. An unresponsive parent may be suffering from post-partum depression and needs help accessing services quickly. Home visitors such as the maternal child health nurses at Prouty can respond to this kind of information and support families to build their capacity for being the kind of parents they want to be.”

As part of a multi-disciplinary team which includes mental health specialists from HCRS, as well as social workers in Family Support and developmental specialists in Early Intervention at Prouty, Prouty nurses have access to colleagues for consultation and referral in a way that makes it easy for a family to get the help they need.

The Winston Prouty Center is expanding to be able to better provide these home visiting and community-based services. It has begun a $400,000 capital campaign and will hold a community fundraiser, “Storytellers on a Mission” produced by The Hatch, on April 18 at The Latchis.

The evening's storytellers, hosted by Hatch co-founder Tom Bodett, a Dummerston-based humorist and regular panelist on NPR's Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me!, include Lizz Winstead, co-creator of The Daily Show, and Ernesto Quinonez, Catie Lazarus, David Martin, and Adam Wade.

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