A Grassroots Approach to Addressing the MCH Workforce Crisis

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Abstract

Following predictions of a dramatic drop in the developmental-behavioral healthcare workforce by 2023 due to retirement and/or burnout, much has been written about ways to replenish or sustain needed personnel. To date, we continue to have a crisis of not enough new clinicians being attracted to the field to replenish the third of the workforce that is expected to retire. Recent concerns about increased clinician mental health problems and burnout in the wake of COVID-19 and other societal stressors add further complexity and urgency. This crisis will not be solved solely by a top-down focus on intensive graduate training or marketing to newly licensed professionals. Through the lived experience of three fellows from the Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental and related Disabilities (LEND) program, this paper offers a “grassroots” approach to supporting people with disabilities (PWD) to weather this rebuilding period by increasing (a) their material wealth through entrepreneurship and (b) capacities for self-determination through thoughtful mentorship and considered changes in institutional culture.

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Mallozzi, A., Maxwell, L., Milne, A., Helm, D., & Fogler, J. (2022). A Grassroots Approach to Addressing the MCH Workforce Crisis. Journal of Psychosocial Rehabilitation and Mental Health, 9(4), 453–459. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40737-022-00278-4

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