Georgia State University, School of Public Health, United States of America.
Georgia State University, School of Public Health, United States of America.
Child Abuse Negl. 2024 Aug;154:106951. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2024.106951. Epub 2024 Jul 24.
Evidence-based prevention services for child abuse and neglect (CAN), typically delivered via home visiting (HV), pivoted to virtual delivery in 2020 to continue family services while adhering to the COVID-19 public health guidelines.
The study aims are to compare parent and implementation outcomes for the HV program, SafeCare©, delivered virtually versus in-person, across a 2-year period.
Three data sources were used to examine parent program engagement and skill mastery, as well as provider fidelity. Sources included: 1) quantitative service data collected as part of routine SafeCare implementation (in-person families, n = 923; virtual families, n = 1978), 2) qualitative survey data collected from SafeCare providers (n = 212) and 3) focus group data with SafeCare Providers (n = 9).
Service data were examined using mixed models due to the nesting of the data, with all analyses controlling for time. Qualitative data from the survey and focus groups were analyzed using thematic coding. Data were triangulated from the three sources to answer the primary research question. Findings suggest that virtual delivery of SafeCare holds promise, with parents who participated virtually completing more modules at a faster pace than in-person clients. SafeCare parents demonstrated positive programmatic outcomes regardless of whether they participated in the program virtually or in-person. Provider fidelity remained high in the transition to virtual delivery. However, technology-related logistical issues and provider self-efficacy related to virtual delivery presented challenges to program success.
The study has multiple implications for the HV field about the viability of virtual service delivery. Further research is warranted with data collected directly from parents, and a more critical analysis of what works best for whom and when to further advance the field.
循证预防儿童虐待和忽视(CAN)服务,通常通过家访(HV)提供,为了在遵守 COVID-19 公共卫生准则的同时继续为家庭提供服务,于 2020 年转向虚拟交付。
本研究旨在比较 HV 计划 SafeCare©在两年期间通过虚拟与面对面两种方式进行时,家长和实施结果。
使用三种数据源来检查家长的计划参与度和技能掌握情况,以及提供者的保真度。来源包括:1)作为 SafeCare 实施的一部分收集的定量服务数据(面对面家庭,n=923;虚拟家庭,n=1978),2)从 SafeCare 提供者收集的定性调查数据(n=212)和 3)与 SafeCare 提供者的焦点小组数据(n=9)。
由于数据嵌套,使用混合模型检查服务数据,所有分析均控制时间。使用主题编码分析来自调查和焦点小组的定性数据。从三个来源汇总数据以回答主要研究问题。研究结果表明,SafeCare 的虚拟交付具有前景,与面对面的客户相比,参与虚拟交付的家长完成的模块更多,速度更快。无论他们是否通过虚拟方式还是面对面方式参与该计划,SafeCare 的父母都表现出积极的项目成果。提供者在向虚拟交付过渡时仍然保持高度的保真度。然而,与技术相关的后勤问题和与虚拟交付相关的提供者自我效能感对计划的成功提出了挑战。
这项研究对 HV 领域关于虚拟服务提供的可行性具有多种意义。需要进一步研究,直接从家长那里收集数据,并更批判性地分析哪些方法最适合谁以及何时最适合进一步推进该领域。