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Erschienen in: Maternal and Child Health Journal 5/2010

01.09.2010

Intermediate Outcomes, Strategies, and Challenges of Eight Healthy Start Projects

verfasst von: Andrea Brand, Deborah Klein Walker, Margaret Hargreaves, Margo Rosenbach

Erschienen in: Maternal and Child Health Journal | Ausgabe 5/2010

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Abstract

Site visits were conducted for the evaluation of the national Healthy Start program to gain an understanding of how projects design and implement five service components (outreach, case management, health education, depression screening and interconceptional care) and four system components (consortium, coordination/collaboration, local health system action plan and sustainability) as well as program staff’s perceptions of these components’ influence on intermediate outcomes. Interviews with project directors, case managers, local evaluators, clinicians, consortium members, outreach/lay workers and other stakeholders were conducted during 3-day in-depth site visits with eight Healthy Start grantees. Grantees reported that both services and systems components were related to self-reported service achievements (e.g. earlier entry into prenatal care) and systems achievements (e.g. consumer involvement). Outreach, case management, and health education were perceived as the service components that contributed most to their achievements while consortia was perceived as the most influential systems component in reaching their goals. Furthermore, cultural competence and community voice were overarching project components that addressed racial/ethnic disparities. Finally, there was great variability across sites regarding the challenges they faced, with poor service availability and limited funding the two most frequently reported. Service provision and systems development are both critical for successful Healthy Start projects to achieve intermediate program outcomes. Unique contextual and community issues influence Healthy Start project design, implementation and reported accomplishments. All eight projects implement the required program components yet outreach, case management, and health education are cited most frequently for contributing to their perceived achievements.
Fußnoten
1
In this section, the number of projects with a particular response is mentioned in parentheses. Since responses are not always mutually exclusive, the numbers do not necessarily add up to eight.
 
2
Listening Visits are modeled after the British Counseling Intervention Model used in the United Kingdom. Research in the UK indicates that these visits are very effective in improving women’s overall mood and reducing the level of depression [8].
 
3
Categories are based on grouped and coded open-ended responses to “Which components contributed most to the achievement of your goals?” “Which specific components were most influential in the success of the activities that you have linked to reducing disparities in birth outcomes?” “Thinking about your prenatal and interconceptional services, what have been your most effective strategies to reduce disparities?” and “What have been the most effective strategies in the program to reduce disparities in infant mortality?”
 
4
Categories are based on grouped and coded open-ended responses to “What have been [project’s] most important achievements?” asked on multiple discussion guides.
 
5
Categories are based on grouped and coded open-ended responses to “What have been [project’s] organizational challenges to serving women during the prenatal period” and “What external contextual factors have influenced the success of the [project]’s initiative in your community?” asked on multiple discussion guides.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Intermediate Outcomes, Strategies, and Challenges of Eight Healthy Start Projects
verfasst von
Andrea Brand
Deborah Klein Walker
Margaret Hargreaves
Margo Rosenbach
Publikationsdatum
01.09.2010
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Maternal and Child Health Journal / Ausgabe 5/2010
Print ISSN: 1092-7875
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-6628
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-008-0421-6

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