Goodman, W. B., Dodge, K. A., Bai, Y., Murphy, R. A., & O'Donnell, K. (2022). Evaluation of a Family Connects Dissemination to Four High-Poverty Rural Counties. Maternal and child health journal, 26(5), 1067–1076. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-021-03297-y
Intervention Components (click on component to see a list of all articles that use that intervention): Home Visits, Access,
Intervention Description: Family Connects is a short-term nurse home visiting approach designed to deliver brief education and intervention, assess family needs, and connect families to community resources for ongoing support. Impact evaluation compared outcomes for families of infants born in the months immediately prior to program launch (comparison group n = 360; Feb. 1, 2014–July 31, 2014) to families of infants born during the FC implementation period (intervention group n = 1068; Sept. 1, 2014-Dec. 31, 2015). Outcomes were assessed for both groups via a 30-min telephone interview when the infants were 6 months old.
Intervention Results: No group differences were found in total emergency care utilization for birthing parents (see Table 3). FC parents reported making more ED and urgent care visits for themselves than did comparison group parents (95% CI = 0.04, 0.51; effect size = 0.14) and (non-significantly) fewer hospital overnight stays. FC parents reported greater perceived social support relative to comparison group parents (95% CI = 0.01, 0.14; effect size = 0.13). No differences were observed for maternal 6-week postpartum health-check completion or endorsed symptoms of depression or anxiety.
Conclusion: Results from this quasi-experimental field trial indicate that FC effectively engages families living in high-poverty rural counties during the postpartum period with broad reach and high program fidelity, leading to positive population impacts on family health and well-being. Implementation findings indicate FC had broad community reach, high nurse reliability and fidelity to the manualized protocol, and nurse-family referral connection rates that exceeded rates observed in prior trials (Dodge et al., 2014, 2019). The findings provide compelling evidence that FC can be disseminated through rural public health departments with high quality. The high completion rate (65% of all eligible families) suggests that the FC is well suited for rural contexts.
Study Design: Quasi-experimental design
Setting: Four rural Eastern North Carolina counties
Population of Focus: Families living in high-povery rural counties
Sample Size: 392 intervention group families and 126 families with infants born between Feb. 1, 2014–July 31, 2014 (natural comparison group).
Age Range: Reproductive age (≥Teenage)
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