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Evaluating Fidelity in Home-Visiting Programs a Qualitative Analysis of 1058 Home Visit Case Notes from 105 Families

OBJECTIVE: Implementation fidelity is a key issue in home-visiting programs as it determines a program’s effectiveness in accomplishing its original goals. This paper seeks to evaluate fidelity in a 27-month program addressing maternal and child health which took place in France between 2006 and 201...

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Autores principales: Saïas, Thomas, Lerner, Emilie, Greacen, Tim, Simon-Vernier, Elodie, Emer, Alessandra, Pintaux, Eléonore, Guédeney, Antoine, Dugravier, Romain, Tereno, Susana, Falissard, Bruno, Tubach, Florence, Revah-Levy, Anne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3356353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22629341
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036915
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author Saïas, Thomas
Lerner, Emilie
Greacen, Tim
Simon-Vernier, Elodie
Emer, Alessandra
Pintaux, Eléonore
Guédeney, Antoine
Dugravier, Romain
Tereno, Susana
Falissard, Bruno
Tubach, Florence
Revah-Levy, Anne
author_facet Saïas, Thomas
Lerner, Emilie
Greacen, Tim
Simon-Vernier, Elodie
Emer, Alessandra
Pintaux, Eléonore
Guédeney, Antoine
Dugravier, Romain
Tereno, Susana
Falissard, Bruno
Tubach, Florence
Revah-Levy, Anne
author_sort Saïas, Thomas
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Implementation fidelity is a key issue in home-visiting programs as it determines a program’s effectiveness in accomplishing its original goals. This paper seeks to evaluate fidelity in a 27-month program addressing maternal and child health which took place in France between 2006 and 2011. METHOD: To evaluate implementation fidelity, home visit case notes were analyzed using thematic qualitative and computer-assisted linguistic analyses. RESULTS: During the prenatal period, home visitors focused on the social components of the program. Visitors discussed the physical changes in pregnancy, and psychological and social environment issues. Discussing immigration, unstable employment and financial related issues, family relationships and dynamics and maternity services, while not expected, were found in case notes. Conversely, health during pregnancy, early child development and postpartum mood changes were not identified as topics within the prenatal case notes. During the postnatal period, most components of the intervention were addressed: home visitors observed the mother’s adaptation to the baby; routine themes such as psychological needs and medical-social networks were evaluated; information on the importance of social support and on adapting the home environment was given; home visitors counseled on parental authority, and addressed mothers’ self-esteem issues; finally, they helped to find child care, when necessary. Some themes were not addressed or partially addressed: health education, child development, home environment, mother’s education plans and personal routine, partner support and play with the child. Other themes were not expected, but found in the case notes: social issues, mother-family relationship, relation with services, couple issues, quality of maternal behavior and child’s language development. CONCLUSIONS: In this program, home visitors experienced difficulties addressing some of the objectives because they gave precedence to the families“ urgent needs. This research stresses the importance of training home visitors to adapt the intervention to the social, psychological and health needs of families.
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spelling pubmed-33563532012-05-24 Evaluating Fidelity in Home-Visiting Programs a Qualitative Analysis of 1058 Home Visit Case Notes from 105 Families Saïas, Thomas Lerner, Emilie Greacen, Tim Simon-Vernier, Elodie Emer, Alessandra Pintaux, Eléonore Guédeney, Antoine Dugravier, Romain Tereno, Susana Falissard, Bruno Tubach, Florence Revah-Levy, Anne PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: Implementation fidelity is a key issue in home-visiting programs as it determines a program’s effectiveness in accomplishing its original goals. This paper seeks to evaluate fidelity in a 27-month program addressing maternal and child health which took place in France between 2006 and 2011. METHOD: To evaluate implementation fidelity, home visit case notes were analyzed using thematic qualitative and computer-assisted linguistic analyses. RESULTS: During the prenatal period, home visitors focused on the social components of the program. Visitors discussed the physical changes in pregnancy, and psychological and social environment issues. Discussing immigration, unstable employment and financial related issues, family relationships and dynamics and maternity services, while not expected, were found in case notes. Conversely, health during pregnancy, early child development and postpartum mood changes were not identified as topics within the prenatal case notes. During the postnatal period, most components of the intervention were addressed: home visitors observed the mother’s adaptation to the baby; routine themes such as psychological needs and medical-social networks were evaluated; information on the importance of social support and on adapting the home environment was given; home visitors counseled on parental authority, and addressed mothers’ self-esteem issues; finally, they helped to find child care, when necessary. Some themes were not addressed or partially addressed: health education, child development, home environment, mother’s education plans and personal routine, partner support and play with the child. Other themes were not expected, but found in the case notes: social issues, mother-family relationship, relation with services, couple issues, quality of maternal behavior and child’s language development. CONCLUSIONS: In this program, home visitors experienced difficulties addressing some of the objectives because they gave precedence to the families“ urgent needs. This research stresses the importance of training home visitors to adapt the intervention to the social, psychological and health needs of families. Public Library of Science 2012-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3356353/ /pubmed/22629341 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036915 Text en Saïas et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Saïas, Thomas
Lerner, Emilie
Greacen, Tim
Simon-Vernier, Elodie
Emer, Alessandra
Pintaux, Eléonore
Guédeney, Antoine
Dugravier, Romain
Tereno, Susana
Falissard, Bruno
Tubach, Florence
Revah-Levy, Anne
Evaluating Fidelity in Home-Visiting Programs a Qualitative Analysis of 1058 Home Visit Case Notes from 105 Families
title Evaluating Fidelity in Home-Visiting Programs a Qualitative Analysis of 1058 Home Visit Case Notes from 105 Families
title_full Evaluating Fidelity in Home-Visiting Programs a Qualitative Analysis of 1058 Home Visit Case Notes from 105 Families
title_fullStr Evaluating Fidelity in Home-Visiting Programs a Qualitative Analysis of 1058 Home Visit Case Notes from 105 Families
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating Fidelity in Home-Visiting Programs a Qualitative Analysis of 1058 Home Visit Case Notes from 105 Families
title_short Evaluating Fidelity in Home-Visiting Programs a Qualitative Analysis of 1058 Home Visit Case Notes from 105 Families
title_sort evaluating fidelity in home-visiting programs a qualitative analysis of 1058 home visit case notes from 105 families
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3356353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22629341
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036915
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