Certified Child Life Specialists (CCLS) are certified and clinically trained in the developmental impact that illness, injury, trauma, and loss can have on a child. All CCLS's have a minimum of a bachelor’s degree, have completed a 600 hour internship and passed a national certifying examination. Child Life Specialists work with children of all ages, birth through young adulthood and collaborate extensively with the child’s family, recognizing that they are the true expert in knowing their child. To reduce fear and anxiety, Child Life Specialists utilize developmentally and psychologically appropriate tools such as therapeutic play, coping interventions, and supportive resources to provide psychosocial and emotional support. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, “child life interventions facilitate coping and adjustment at times and under circumstances that might otherwise prove overwhelming for the child.” The American Academy of Pediatrics recognizes the value of the child life profession and the support that Certified Child Life Specialists can provide to children and adolescents.
Families with children facing a difficult time such as overwhelming grief and/or loss, coping with a significant transition or a new medical diagnosis in the family will benefit from the support of a Certified Child Life Specialist.
Examples of challenging circumstances may include but are not limited to:
• Anxiety or fear surrounding doctors or dentist visits, tests or procedures
• Death of a parent, grandparent, family member, friend, or pet
• Difficulty understanding an acute or chronic health diagnosis for the parent or child
• Difficulty coping with the effects COVID-19
• School re-entry following a health diagnosis or significant life change
• Difficulty coping with significant transitions such as moving, deployment, custody change, or incarceration
• Coping with a child or sibling with special needs
Reference: Committee on Hospital Care and Association of Child Life Professionals (formerly known as The Child life Council). Child Life Services. Pediatrics May 2014, 133 (5) e1471-e1478; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2014-0556)