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Online Screening
Child and family stress factors
Pregnancy and birth
At risk pregnancy, medically assisted procreation or any other problem
Unplanned pregnancy
Difficult or complicated birth (premature birth, prolonged delivery, emergency caesarean section, vacuum birth, forceps birth, ...)
Traumatic birth for the mother and/or the father
Separation of the infant from the mother after birth
Personal stress factors
Immigration background
Neglect
Addiction, alcohol or drug abuse for the mother or/and the father
Experience of violence/abuse
Experiences of war and/or fleeing a country
Physical or psychological issues: chronic diseases, disabilities, depression, eating disorders, blindness, deafness, ...)
Compulsory education not completed/ no further studies or education
Recent death or profound grief
Age of parents < 20 at birth or > 40 at first child's birth
Difficulties in daily life planning (repeatedly forgetting appointments, difficulties in keeping daily routines, lack of tidiness, ...)
Family stress factors
Unkown and/or unregistered paternity
Single parent family
Stressful couple conflicts, separation
Domestic abuse
Absence of one of the two parents (work, hospitalization, residency issues, incarceration
Parents rarely available as a couple (only as a parenting couple)
Little age difference between siblings: less than 18 months or twins
Older siblings with challenging issues (behavioural issues, physical or mental illness such as autism or disabilities)
Physical distance from relatives, difficult relationship or family conflicts
Social stress factors
Living in the current location for less than 6 months
Little social integration, few contacts outside of the family, little contacts with families with children of the same age
Little support outside the family: lack of help from relatives or neighbors
Poor or little knowledge of local language
Material stress factors
Cramped living condition
Living with parents or parents-in-law
One or both parents unemployed
Precarious financial situation, debts
Income support
Protective factors
Significant help from social network
Third party interested in the child (godmother, father, neighbours, ...)
Positive family atmosphere
Accepting and/ or seeking help (therapies, counseling centers, daycare, ...) existing support network for the family