Health Economics and Social Policy Group, School of Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Central Australian Aboriginal Congress Aboriginal Corporation, Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia.
PLoS One. 2018 Dec 7;13(12):e0208764. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0208764. eCollection 2018.
The Nurse Family Partnership Program developed in the USA, designed to improve mother and infant/child outcomes, has reported lower rates of child protection system involvement. The study tested the hypothesis that an adapted Nurse Family Partnership Program implemented in an Aboriginal community in Central Australia (the FPP) would improve Child Protection outcomes.
This was a retrospective and prospective cohort study drawing on linked administrative data, including birth registry, primary health care client information system, FPP program data, and child protection data. Participants were children of women eligible for the FPP program (an exposed and a control group of women, eligible but not referred) live-born between 1/3/2009 (program commencement) and 31/12/2015. Child protection data covered all reports, investigations, substantiations and out-of-home care placements from the time of the child's birth to 31/12/2016. Generalised linear modelling was used to estimate the relative risk (RR) of involvement with child protection and type of involvement (report, investigation, substantiation, out-of-home-care placement) among FPP and control children.
FPP mothers (n = 291) were on average younger, were more likely to be first-time mothers and experiencing housing instability than control mothers (n = 563). Among younger mothers ≤20 years, FPP children had statistically significantly lower rates of involvement with child protection (ARRreport = 0.49, 95% CI: 0.29 to 0.82; ARRinvestigation = 0.34, 95% CI: 0.19 to 0.64; ARRsubstantiation = 0.45, 95% CI: 0.21 to 0.96) and experience fewer days in care (ARR = 0.10, 95% CI: 0.02 to 0.48). Among children of first-time mothers, FPP children also had statistically significantly lower rates of involvement with child protection (ARRreport = 0.50, 95% CI: 0.30 to 0.83; ARRinvestigation = 0.36, 95% CI: 0.19 to 0.67; ARRsubstantiation = 0.38, 95% CI: 0.18 to 0.80) and fewer days in care (ARR = 0.06, 95% CI: 0.01 to 0.27).
Study results suggest a modified Nurse Family Partnership delivered by an Indigenous community-controlled organisation may have reduced child protection system involvement in a highly vulnerable First Nations population, especially in younger or first-time mothers. Testing these results with an RCT design is desirable.
美国开发的家庭母婴护理计划旨在改善母婴/儿童的结果,该计划报告的儿童保护系统参与率较低。本研究检验了一个假设,即一个适用于澳大利亚中部一个土著社区的家庭母婴护理计划(FPP)会改善儿童保护结果。
这是一项回顾性和前瞻性队列研究,利用了链接的行政数据,包括出生登记、初级保健客户信息系统、FPP 项目数据和儿童保护数据。参与者是符合家庭母婴护理计划条件(暴露组和对照组的女性)的妇女所生的活产婴儿,出生时间为 2009 年 3 月 1 日(计划开始)至 2015 年 12 月 31 日。儿童保护数据涵盖了从孩子出生到 2016 年 12 月 31 日期间所有的报告、调查、证实和家庭外照顾安置情况。使用广义线性模型来估计 FPP 和对照组儿童与儿童保护相关的相对风险(RR)和参与类型(报告、调查、证实、家庭外照顾安置)。
FPP 母亲(n=291)平均年龄较小,更有可能是初产妇,并且住房不稳定的情况比对照组母亲(n=563)更常见。在≤20 岁的年轻母亲中,FPP 儿童的儿童保护参与率有统计学意义的降低(报告的 ARR=0.49,95%CI:0.29 至 0.82;调查的 ARR=0.34,95%CI:0.19 至 0.64;证实的 ARR=0.45,95%CI:0.21 至 0.96),且在照顾中的天数更少(ARR=0.10,95%CI:0.02 至 0.48)。在初产妇的子女中,FPP 儿童的儿童保护参与率也有统计学意义的降低(报告的 ARR=0.50,95%CI:0.30 至 0.83;调查的 ARR=0.36,95%CI:0.19 至 0.67;证实的 ARR=0.38,95%CI:0.18 至 0.80),且在照顾中的天数更少(ARR=0.06,95%CI:0.01 至 0.27)。
研究结果表明,由一个土著社区控制的组织提供的改良家庭母婴护理计划可能减少了一个高度脆弱的原住民群体对儿童保护系统的参与,尤其是在年轻或初产妇中。用 RCT 设计来测试这些结果是可取的。