Beth Anne Baus - Speaker

Family Support Worker
Halton Children's Aid Society

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Beth Anne has worked within the Child Welfare System for over 20 years. She is passionate about her work at Halton Children’s Aid Society on the Clinical Consultation and Engagement Team. This is a unique team within the Halton CAS that plays a vital role working with families and children involved with Halton CAS.
Her work within the agency offers an attachment-based trauma informed perspective to evaluate the effectiveness of interventions in order to support families in achieving positive outcomes. She achieves these outcomes by providing education, skill enhancement, assess experiences with clinical and systemic difficulties, advocate for families and referral to community resources.

She has been a support in assisting families in identifying barriers to services and supporting them in accessing needed resources. Her work includes providing parent coaching and psychoeducation in areas of affect regulation, impulse control and social emotional skills for children, parents, and caregivers.
Beth Anne is committed to working with community resources and caregivers generating early interventions to assist in strengthening families and creating healthy attachments for children.
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Beth Anne Baus's Sessions

Workshop

The Halton Early Years Mental Health Committee (EYMHC) is a cross-sector collaboration of service providers who work with infants/young children and their families. Research has shown that significant mental health issues can and do exist in very young children and tend to manifest as serious social, emotional or behavioural problems (Zeenah, 2009). This session will highlight the importance that you, as professionals in early childhood settings, play in promoting the mental health and well-being of all young children and their families. A child’s well-being and healthy brain development is contingent upon infants/young children having healthy relationships with their caregivers. Other important factors to consider include developing a sense of belonging and valuing and respecting an individual or family’s culture and beliefs. The session will also increase your awareness of the Halton Early Years Mental Health Toolkit itself; where to find it; highlight the many resources which can help promote professional development and explore further opportunities for embedding this content
into practice.
Date: October 28, 2022
Time: 10:15 am - 11:45 am