The Carolyn E. Wylie Center is a community-based non-profit organization serving children, youth, and families across multiple developmental and mental health needs. The organization operates several listed programs including early intervention services for infants and toddlers, autism spectrum support, mental health treatment, outreach counseling, housing counseling, and parent education initiatives. The center collaborates with local government agencies, including Riverside County Department of Mental Health and Inland Regional Center, to deliver comprehensive services to qualifying families.
The Wylie Center offers home-based early intervention programs for children ages 0-3 with developmental delays or behavioral challenges, including individualized family service plans, parent education on childhood development, one-on-one sessions to meet developmental milestones, infant stimulation, and infant massage services. For children ages 2-6, they provide in-home early mental health treatment through collaboration with the Department of Mental Health, including behavior modification programs, preschool and pediatrician consultation, and kindergarten transition support. Additional services include autism spectrum intervention, outreach counseling for at-risk youth, housing counseling, and parent education on child development.
The organization distinguishes itself through its focus on early intervention and prevention, delivering most services in the home setting rather than clinical facilities, and maintaining active partnerships with regional healthcare and developmental service agencies. Their programs target the earliest years of child development when interventions are most impactful, and they provide free or low-cost services to qualified families regardless of ability to pay.
The primary limitation is that services are geographically restricted to Riverside County and eligibility depends on qualification criteria determined by partnering agencies like Inland Regional Center. Families must contact the regional center intake coordinator to determine eligibility rather than applying directly to the Wylie Center, which creates an additional access barrier for some populations.