Frances Gardner representing our work on a plenary panel at the CHILD Conference on Scaling What Works in Early Childhood Settings alongside Hirokazu Yoshikawa Robyn Mildon and Vasuki Utravathy
Parenting for Lifelong Health
Non-profit Organizations
Oxford, Oxfordshire 5,356 followers
Social enterprise charity committed to providing free, evidence-based parenting support to every parent, everywhere
About us
Parenting for Lifelong Health (PLH) is a charity (UK registration #1200313) committed to providing freely available, evidence-based parenting programmes to every parent, everywhere with the ultimate aim of preventing violence against children and improving child learning, health, and wellbeing. In collaboration with UNICEF, the World Health Organization, and academic and non-profit partners, we have developed and tested a suite of open access, non-commercialised in-person, remote, digital, and multimedia parenting programmes for the Global South. These programmes have been rigorously tested in 15 randomised controlled trials demonstrating positive results across multiple child and family outcomes. Our programmes are currently being delivered in over 40 low- and middle-income countries across Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and the Caribbean. Since our inception in 2011, we have reached over 300,000 families through our in-person programmes. We also recently co-led the interagency COVID-19 Playful Parenting Emergency Response which provided evidence-informed parenting resources to over 210.5 million people during the pandemic. Parenting for Lifelong Health is also a core member of the Global Initiative to Support Parents which aims to provide universal access to evidence-based parenting programmes globally.
- Website
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www.parentingforlifelonghealth.org
External link for Parenting for Lifelong Health
- Industry
- Non-profit Organizations
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- Oxford, Oxfordshire
- Type
- Nonprofit
- Founded
- 2011
- Specialties
- Social enterprise, Parenting programs, Digital solutions, Violence prevention, Playful parenting, Child development, Scaling, Public health, Evidence-based research, Charity, Nonprofit, and Systems Solutions
Locations
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Primary
Oxford, Oxfordshire, GB
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Cape Town, ZA
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London, GB
Employees at Parenting for Lifelong Health
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Jamie Lachman
Empowering parents with the tools and skills to support health child development and wellbeing while preventing family violence
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Tendai Chinyimba
Strategy and Operational Design Specialist
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Laurie Markle
Chief of Solutions @ PLH
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Laura White
Interim Chief Operating Officer at Parenting for Lifelong Health
Updates
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We are very excited about our new partnership with Humblebee who is helping us explore innovative ways of using generative AI to guide parents with practicing new skills through role-plays. Their entire team is so creative, collaborative, and receptive to trying new ideas. BIG THANKS to World Childhood Foundation for making this possible!
We’re delighted to be partnering with Parenting for Lifelong Health to further their work empowering parents to improve child development outcomes, reduce family violence, and promote mental health and wellbeing through scalable, evidence-based parenting interventions. #humblebee #ai #artificialintelligence
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Parenting for Lifelong Health is so lucky to have Durgesh Rajandiran on our team leading our scaling work in Malaysia!
From Early Childhood Development Action Network (ECDAN) Knowledge Fellow to Systems Manager at Parenting for Lifelong Health (PLH) Malaysia, Durgesh Rajandiran is making a lasting impact on parenting programs in Southeast Asia! 🌏👏 With the invaluable mentorship of GPI’s Prof. Dr Rumaya Juhari, Co-Principal Investigator of Parenting within the Preschool System in Malaysia, and Sabine Rakotomalala (World Health Organization, Geneva), Durgesh has strengthened her expertise in parenting interventions and violence prevention. A 2024 pilot of a hybrid parenting programme in Malaysia’s KEMAS rural preschool system showed significant reductions in parental stress and child abuse, while strengthening caregiver-child relationships. As part of PLH and the Global Initiative to Support Parents (GISP), Durgesh also shared insights at the Asia-Pacific Regional Network for Early Childhood (ARNEC) Conference, helping shape the future of parenting programs in the region. Read more here: https://lnkd.in/djvjrGkS Photo below by Early Childhood Development Action Network (ECDAN) #EarlyChildhoodDevelopment #ParentingSupport #ParentingProgrammes #EndingViolenceAgainstChildren
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Parenting for Lifelong Health has been supporting the Kuwaiti Ministry to embed parenting support within the child protection services. Check out this great interview with Hind Almazeedi who explains how our parenting solutions have been adapted and are being tested in Kuwait: https://lnkd.in/enFaXi3c
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Learning from adolescents about what positive parenting means to them at UNICEF México stakeholder workshop on scaling parenting support in Mexico: respectful communication, recognition of their rights, building trust, time to explore, and understanding between parents and adolescents are some of their key recommendations. - with Ana Pro Alcántara Max Klapow Jamie Lachman
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We are looking for someone with T4D experience based in Southeast Asia to join our team scaling parenting support through technological innovation. Please share (and apply if interested)!
Do you like running design workshops, innovating for new use cases, have an eye for detail, a knack for product management, and the technical capacity to help drive local ownership of digital tools? We are looking for the next member of the Parenting for Lifelong Health Solutions Team and Nguza Yikona and I would love to hear from you! We're a global team, but this position will offer hiring preference for someone based in Southern Asia. If you know someone with T4D experience that might be interested, please share!
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Wishing you a peaceful and happy holiday season! We are very grateful for our ongoing collaboration with so many amazing partners this year. Together we have provided evidence-based playful parenting support to more than 3.5 million parents and 7.3 million children around the world. Thank you for being such an important part of this incredibly meaningful and impactful work! With gratitude, The PLH Global Community Jamie Lachman Laura White Laurie Markle Tendai Chinyimba Oscar Kadenge Cathryn Wood Durgesh Rajandiran Deepali Barapatre Jenny Doubt Jenny Doubt Nguza Yikona Ana Pro Alcántara Hannah Clark Thandi Mills Global Parenting Initiative Apapacho Centre of Excellence in Parenting - ALTERNATIVA Masayang Pamilya (MaPa) Organization, Inc. Clowns Without Borders South Africa Early Childhood Development Action Network (ECDAN)
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Exciting new research published by Jamie Lachman and Joyce Wamoyi on the scale-up of Parenting for Lifelong Health's Furaha Teens programme for parents and adolescents in Tanzania! Results demonstrated sustained impacts on reduced violence against adolescent girls when delivered in-person at scale during the pandemic. Findings also showed reduced school-based violence and caregiver experience of intimate partner violence.
Empowering parents with the tools and skills to support health child development and wellbeing while preventing family violence
New paper just published in The BMJ on the scale-up of Parenting for Lifelong Health's programme for parents and adolescents in Tanzania! https://lnkd.in/eNtFjW9p This study is the first to use a non-randomised design to evaluate the pre–post changes of an evidence-based parenting programme delivered at scale as part of routine services in a low-income and middle-income country. Conducted within a broader community-based HIV prevention initiative targeting families with adolescent girls, it significantly contributes to our understanding of how such programmes can reduce VAC—a major factor driving HIV incidence among adolescent girls. Additionally, it highlights the challenges of relying on implementing agencies to collect monitoring and evaluation data during large-scale delivery. Results showing reductions in caregiver-reported and adolescent-reported physical and emotional maltreatment suggest that the programme has sustained impacts beyond initial randomised controlled trial testing. Reported reductions in intimate partner violence by female parents/caregivers and school-based violence by adolescent girls suggest wider potential impacts of a programme primarily focused on parent–child relationships. Congratulations to all who were involved including Pact, Clowns Without Borders South Africa, The Evaluation Fund: Reducing Violence Against Children, National Institute for Medical Research (NIMR) - Tanzania, Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, Joyce Wamoyi, Yulia Shenderovich, Mackenzie Martin, PhD, Nyasha Manjengenja (PhD), Francisco Calderón, and others!
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Thank you for these insights, Sanjana J! It was such a pleasure to share some of our experiences and learn from others about how we can adapt, deliver, and test more scalable parenting solutions using digital technology at the Global Ministerial Conference to End Violence Against Children in Bogotá. Lots of opportunities to grow especially in the private sector. We look forward to exploring this further with you!
On the sidelines of the Global Ministerial End Violence Against Children meeting, I had the opportunity to do a brief presentation on Parenting in the early years, convened by the team at Parenting for Lifelong Health. Some of my takeaways from the event: 1. It was underscored at this event and throughout the ministerial that universal access to parenting programs is a proven intervention to end violence against children. Specifically, gender transformative parenting programs that address interpersonal conflicts within families has proven impact on improving quality of child wellbeing - sounds like a no brainer - yet examples of gender transformative parenting programs that are delivered at scale are few and far imbetween. 2. Second, there is compelling evidence that digital parenting programs show impact on families with little to no inperson scaffolds - I confess I’m very intrigued by this, and hoping to see more evidence at scale 3. For scaling parenting programs, not only do programs need to be flexible and adaptable so they ‘fit’ into government system, but also leverage private sector to drive demand - I’d love to discover examples of private sector innovations that increase parenting knowledge and wellbeing. Thanks to Lucie Cluver Isang Awah Jamie Lachman and the Early Childhood Development Action Network (ECDAN) team for giving us the opportunity to share examples from Grand Challenges Canada’s Saving Brains portfolio. And thanks to all the other speakers who continue to provoke thinking and reflection on how we can be more effective in reaching parents and families.
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Important new research published in JMIR Publications by Max Klapow, Andrew Rosenblatt, Frances Gardner, and our CEO, Jamie Lachman on the feasibility and acceptability of chatbots that provide parenting support: “This is the first study to review the implementation feasibility and acceptability of chatbots for delivering parenting programs. While preliminary evidence suggests that chatbots can be used to deliver parenting programs, further research, standardization of reporting, and scaling up of effectiveness testing are critical to harness the full benefits of chatbots for promoting family well-being.” Parenting for Lifelong Health is at the forefront of developing, testing, and scaling innovative tech-assisted parenting support in the Global South. This research is critical to our work to make sure that our innovations are effective. Congratulations to the authors, especially Max Klapow! #parenting #chatbots #feasibility
Grand Union Scholar @ the University of Oxford | Behavioral Scientist | Scaling up digital behavior change and mental health care globally
Really happy to share my latest research in JMIR Publications which examines the potential of chatbots to deliver parenting interventions at scale. Parenting programs play a critical role in enhancing caregiver mental health, family well-being, and improving child development outcomes, but scaling them remains a significant challenge. As highlighted by Surgeon General Vivek Murthy in August, supporting parents is absolutely critical to family well-being. Understanding our best delivery mechanisms to scale up this support is important for researchers, practitioners, and policymakers alike. Our systematic review assessed the feasibility and acceptability of using chatbots for these interventions, and while the preliminary findings are promising, there is a clear need for further research to standardize approaches and ensure scalability. This work highlights an emerging area that could transform how we support parents and families, particularly in expanding access to critical resources. Big thanks to my co-authors, Andrew Rosenblatt, Jamie Lachman, and Frances Gardner, as well as the support of the Global Parenting Initiative, Parenting for Lifelong Health, and the ESRC: Economic and Social Research Council. If you’re interested in digital health, parenting interventions, or evaluation of chatbot-based interventions, take a look, or give this audio summary a listen! Paper: https://lnkd.in/eHfS7iyJ Podcast-style summary: https://lnkd.in/e6RGQs_j