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  1. Erikson Institute Fussy Baby Network® (FBNJ is a national model home visiting prevention program known for its approach to family engagement called the FAN which stands for Facilitating Attuned Interactions (Gilkerson & Gray, 2014; Gilkerson et al., 2012).

  2. • fussy baby/capacity building moments: Acknowledge: “This is the cry you were telling me about”. Affirm: “Please feel free to do whatever you need to do?”

  3. 3 kwi 2020 · High levels of infant crying place families at risk for disrupted relationships, parenting stress, and even for child maltreatment. We conducted an evaluation of the Fussy Baby Network ® (FBN), a program supporting families struggling with infant crying and related concerns.

  4. Over the last 10 years, the FAN has become a national model for family engagement and reflective practice, and is being adapted to more settings serving children, ranging from early childhood mental health consultation systems to pediatrician training.

  5. All babies cry, but some cry more than others. One in five babies is fussy — difficult to comfort and may have trouble feeding and sleeping. For parents, caring for a fussy baby can be exhausting and frustrating. There is no quick fix — but there is help. Call the Fussy Baby Network, Erikson Institute’s program for parents who have

  6. Erikson Institute Fussy Baby network® (FBn) developed an approach to engaging parents around their urgent concerns about their baby’s crying, sleeping, or feeding in a way which builds their longer-term capacities as parents. This approach, called.

  7. The FAN is both a conceptual framework (see Figure 1) and a practical tool for achieving attunement in relationships and reflective practice. At the center of the FAN are the parent’s concerns—worries about the self, about interacting with the infant, about the material world.