Duggan A, Windham A, McFarlane E, Fuddy L, Rohde C, Buchbinder S, Sia C
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Pediatrics. 2000 Jan;105(1 Pt 3):250-9.
To describe family identification, family engagement, and service delivery in a statewide home visiting program for at-risk families of newborns.
Six target communities of Hawaii's Healthy Start Program (HSP), which incorporates 1) early identification of at-risk families of newborns via population-based screening and assessment, and 2) paraprofessional home visiting to improve family functioning, promote child health and development, and prevent child maltreatment.
Cross-sectional study: describes early identification process and family characteristics associated with initial enrollment. Longitudinal study: describes home visiting process and characteristics associated with continued participation.
Cross-sectional study: civilian births in 6 communities (n = 6553). Longitudinal study: at-risk families in the intervention group of a randomized trial of the HSP (n = 373).
completeness and timeliness of early identification and home visiting activities; family characteristics: sociodemographics, child abuse risk factors, infant biologic risk.
Early identification staff determined risk status for 84% of target families. Families with higher risk scores, young mothers with limited schooling, and families with infants at biologic risk were more likely to enroll in home visiting. Half of those who enrolled were active at 1 year with an average of 22 visits. Families where the father had multiple risk factors and where the mother was substance abusing were more likely to have >/=12 visits; mothers who were unilaterally violent toward the father were less likely. Most families were linked with a medical home; linkage rates for other community resources varied widely by type of service. Half of families overall, but >/=80% of those active at 1 year, received core home visiting services. Performance varied by program site.
It is challenging to engage and retain at-risk families in home visiting. Service monitoring must be an integral part of operations.
描述一项针对新生儿高危家庭的全州家访项目中的家庭识别、家庭参与及服务提供情况。
夏威夷健康起步项目(HSP)的六个目标社区,该项目包括:1)通过基于人群的筛查和评估早期识别新生儿高危家庭;2)由准专业人员进行家访,以改善家庭功能、促进儿童健康与发展并预防儿童虐待。
横断面研究:描述早期识别过程及与首次登记相关的家庭特征。纵向研究:描述家访过程及与持续参与相关的特征。
横断面研究:6个社区的平民出生情况(n = 6553)。纵向研究:HSP随机试验干预组中的高危家庭(n = 373)。
早期识别和家访活动的完整性与及时性;家庭特征:社会人口统计学、虐待儿童风险因素、婴儿生物学风险。
早期识别工作人员确定了84%的目标家庭的风险状况。风险评分较高的家庭、受教育程度有限的年轻母亲以及有生物学风险婴儿的家庭更有可能登记参加家访。登记参加的家庭中有一半在1年时仍积极参与,平均家访22次。父亲有多种风险因素且母亲有药物滥用问题的家庭更有可能接受≥12次家访;对父亲有单方暴力行为的母亲接受家访的可能性较小。大多数家庭与医疗之家建立了联系;与其他社区资源的联系率因服务类型而异。总体而言,一半的家庭接受了核心家访服务,但在1年时仍积极参与的家庭中,这一比例≥80%。不同项目地点的表现有所不同。
让高危家庭参与并持续接受家访具有挑战性。服务监测必须成为运营的一个组成部分。