Policy and Equity Group, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Parkville, Victoria, Australia
Centre for Community Child Health, The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2021 May 21;11(5):e044488. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-044488.
Poverty and deprivation can harm children's future health, learning, economic productivity and societal participation. The Australian Healthier Wealthier Families project seeks to reduce the childhood inequities caused by poverty and deprivation by creating a systematic referral pathway between two free, community-based services: universal, well-child nursing services, which provide health and development support to families with children from birth to school entry, and financial counselling. By adapting the successful Scottish 'Healthier Wealthier Children' model, the objectives of this Australian pilot are to test the (1) of systematising the referral pathway, and (2) short-term on household finances, caregiver health, parenting efficacy and financial service use.
This pilot randomised controlled trial will run in three sites across two Australian states (Victoria and New South Wales), recruiting a total of 180 participants. Nurses identify eligible caregivers with a 6-item, study-designed screening survey for financial hardship. Caregivers who report one or more risk factors and consent are randomised. The intervention is financial counselling. The comparator is usual care plus information from a government money advice website. Feasibility will be evaluated using the number/proportion of caregivers who complete screening, consent and research measures, and access financial counselling. Though powered to assess feasibility, impacts will be measured 6 months post-enrolment with qualitative interviews and questionnaires about caregiver-reported income, loans and costs (adapted from national surveys, for example, the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey); health (General Health Questionnaire 1, EuroQol five-dimensional questionnaire, Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scale short-form); efficacy (from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children); and financial service use (study-designed) compared between arms.
Ethics committees of the Royal Children's Hospital (HREC/57372/RCHM-2019) and South West Sydney Local Health District (2019/ETH13455) have approved the study. Participants and stakeholders will receive results through regular communication channels comprising meetings, presentations and publications.
ACTRN12620000154909; prospectively registered. Pre-results.
贫困和匮乏会损害儿童未来的健康、学习、经济生产力和社会参与度。澳大利亚“更健康更富裕家庭”项目旨在通过创建一条系统的转介途径来减少贫困和匮乏给儿童带来的不平等,该途径连接两项免费的社区服务:为从出生到入学的儿童家庭提供健康和发展支持的普及型、良好儿童护理服务,以及财务咨询服务。通过借鉴成功的苏格兰“更健康更富裕儿童”模式,该澳大利亚试点项目的目标是检验(1)为该转介途径建立系统化的方式是否可行,以及(2)对家庭财务、护理人员健康、育儿效能和财务服务使用的短期影响。
本试点随机对照试验将在澳大利亚两个州(维多利亚州和新南威尔士州)的三个地点进行,共招募 180 名参与者。护士通过一项 6 项研究设计的、用于筛查经济困难的调查问卷识别符合条件的护理人员。报告有一个或多个风险因素且同意参与的护理人员被随机分组。干预措施是财务咨询服务。对照组是常规护理加政府理财网站上的信息。通过完成筛查、同意和研究措施以及获得财务咨询服务的护理人员的数量/比例来评估可行性。尽管该研究旨在评估可行性,但将在入组后 6 个月通过 caregiver 报告的收入、贷款和支出(改编自全国性调查,例如,澳大利亚家庭、收入和劳动力动态调查;);健康(一般健康问卷 1、欧洲五维健康量表、抑郁、焦虑和压力量表短表);效能(来自澳大利亚纵向研究);以及财务服务使用(研究设计)来评估两组间的差异。
皇家儿童医院伦理委员会(HREC/57372/RCHM-2019)和西南悉尼地方卫生区伦理委员会(2019/ETH13455)已批准该研究。通过定期会议、演示和出版物等沟通渠道向参与者和利益相关者通报研究结果。
ACTRN12620000154909;前瞻性注册。预结果。