Prenatal and Infancy Home Visitation by Nurses

General Information

View a brief abstract of this project.

View a complete, printer-friendly profile of this project.

Evaluator(s) University of Colorado
Cornell University
University of Rochester
University of Denver
Investigator(s) David Olds (University of Colorado)
Sponsor(s) University of Colorado
Cornell University
University of Rochester
University of Denver
Funder(s) Biomedical Research Support
Bureau of Community Health Services, Maternal and Child Health Research Grants Division
US Maternal and Child Health Bureau, DHHS, HRSA
Carnegie Foundation
Colorado Trust
Commonwealth Fund
David and Lucile Packard Foundation
Ford Foundation
National Center for Child Abuse and Neglect
National Institute for Mental Health
National Institute of Nursing Research
PEW Charitable Trusts
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
US Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families
US Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
William T. Grant Foundation
US Department of Justice
Subcontractor(s) Not applicable
 
Domain Child/Family
Status Completed with continuing analysis
Duration Jan 1977 - Dec 1999
Type Research and/or Program Evaluation
Goal To examine the impact of a program of prenatal and early childhood home visitation by nurses as a means of improving parental behaviors and environmental conditions early in the life cycle. By preventing poor conditions for pregnancy, child abuse and neglect, accidental childhood injuries, closely spaced pregnancy, and thwarted economic security of parents, problems such as infant mortality, pre-term delivery, low birthweight, neurodevelopmental impairments in young children, and later social problems can be avoided.
Program/Policy Description Mothers are enrolled through the third trimester of pregnancy. Visits are scheduled once a week during the first month of enrollment. Thereafter, visits are scheduled every other week until the birth of the baby. Nurses again visit weekly for six weeks after the baby is born. From the child’s 2nd to 21st postnatal month, visits are scheduled twice a month. From the 21st to 24th postnatal month, visits are scheduled once a month. Each visit lasts approximately 90 minutes.

Nurse home visitors follow detailed visit-by-visit program protocols that focus on five domains of functioning: personal health, maternal role development, environmental health, maternal life-course development, and family and friend support. The content of the protocols is organized developmentally to reflect those challenges that women are likely to confront at different stages of pregnancy and during the first 2 years of the child’s life. Within each of the five domains, specific assessments are made of maternal, child, and family functioning, and specific educational content and psychosocial interventions are implemented depending upon the nature and degree of vulnerability revealed in the assessment.

During home visits, nurses carry out three major activities: 1) promoting adaptive change in behavior that affects the outcomes of pregnancy, the health and development of the child, and maternal life course; 2) helping women build supportive relationships with family members and friends; and 3) linking family members with other health and human services. In carrying out these activities, emphasis is placed on the importance of building on parents’ strengths and promoting parental competence and control over life circumstances.

Notes While the predominant population served by the program is low-income, unmarried women, the women’s husbands or boyfriends and their own mothers are especially encouraged to participate in the home visits because they often play decisive roles in determining the extent to which women will improve their health habits, finish their education, find work, secure appropriate child care, and address the needs of the child. In order to facilitate the involvement of friends and family members, nurses schedule weekend and evening visits to accommodate their work schedules.
 
Last Updated 04/25/00
Type of Summary Reviewed
External Reviewer(s) David Olds (University of Colorado)
Contact(s) David Olds (olds.david@tchden.org)
University of Colorado
Health Sciences Center, KPRD
1825 Marion Street
(T) (303) 864-5206
(F) (303) 864-5236

Populations Studied

Target Population Pregnant/parenting teens
Children younger than 1 (infants)
Low-income households
Subgroups Analyzed Single parent families
Two-parent families
Children 1-6
Children 7-18
Sample Size and Unit Elmira: (N=400). Primarily (89%) Caucasian families. 85% women were either low-income, unmarried, or teenaged. Random assignment to Treatment groups 1,2,3, or 4. Families in Treatment 1 (n=94) were provided sensory and developmental screening for the child at 12 and 24 months of age. Families in Treatment 2 (n=90) were provided with screening services offered to those in Treatment 1 plus free transportation. Families in Treatment 3 (n=100) were provided with screening, transportation, and a nurse that visited them at home during pregnancy. Families in Treatment 4 (n=116) were provided all services plus nurse continued home visits until child’s 2nd birthday. The first trial of the program began in 1977.

Memphis: (N=1135). Primarily (92%) African-American families. Participants had to have one of the following risk conditions: 1) unmarried, 2) less than 12 years of education, or 3) unemployed. Randomly assigned to Treatment groups 1, 2 ,3 or 4. Families in Treatment 1 (n=166) were provided transportation to prenatal care but no postnatal visits or screening. Families in Treatment 2 (n=515) were provided transportation to prenatal care, screening, and referral services until 24 months after birth. Families in Treatment 3 (n=230) were provided transportation, screening, and nurse home visits during pregnancy, once at the hospital, and once at home after birth. Families in Treatment 4 (n=228) were provided same services as Treatment 3 plus received home visits until child’s 2nd birthday. Program began June 1990 and ended August 1991.

Denver: (N=735). Including 331 (40%) Mexican-American families. Random assignment to Treatment groups 1, 2, or 3. Families in Treatment 1 (n=255) received screening for children at ages 1 and 2 years and referral to services if needed. Families in Treatment 2 (n=235) received developmental screening and referral plus nurse home visits through pregnancy through child’s 2nd year. Families in Treatment 3 (n=245) received screening and referral plus paraprofessional home visitation from pregnancy through child’s 2nd year.

Sites Studied

Elmira, New York
Memphis, Tennessee
Denver, Colorado