Randomized controlled trial of Family Connects: Effects on child emergency medical care from birth to 24 months
Abstract
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>One of Tom Dishion's most significant contributions
to prevention science was the development of affordable, ecologically valid interventions,
such as the Family Check-Up, that screen for child and family risk factors broadly,
but concentrate family-specific interventions on those with greatest potential for
population impact. In the spirit of this approach, investigators examined effects
of a brief, universal postnatal home visiting program on child emergency medical care
and billing costs from birth to age 24 months. Family Connects is a community-wide
public health intervention that combines identification and alignment of community
services and resources with brief, postpartum nurse home visits designed to assess
risk, provide supportive guidance, and connect families with identified risk to community
resources. Over 18 months, families of all 4,777 resident Durham County, North Carolina,
births were randomly assigned based on even or odd birth date to receive a postnatal
nurse home visiting intervention or services as usual (control). Independently, 549
of these families were randomly selected and participated in an impact evaluation
study. Families, blind to study goals, provided written consent to access hospital
administrative records. Results indicate that children randomly assigned to Family
Connects had significantly less total emergency medical care (by 37%) through age
24 months, with results observed across almost all subgroups. Examination of billing
records indicate a $3.17 decrease in total billing costs for each $1 in program costs.
Overall, results suggest that community-wide postpartum support program can significantly
reduce population rates of child emergency medical care through age 24 months while
being cost-beneficial to communities.</jats:p>
Type
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19308Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1017/s0954579419000889Publication Info
Goodman, W Benjamin; Dodge, Kenneth A; Bai, Yu; O'Donnell, Karen J; & Murphy, Robert
A (n.d.). Randomized controlled trial of Family Connects: Effects on child emergency medical
care from birth to 24 months. Development and Psychopathology. pp. 1-10. 10.1017/s0954579419000889. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19308.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Yu Bai
Statistician III
Kenneth A. Dodge
William McDougall Distinguished Professor of Public Policy Studies
Kenneth A. Dodge is the William McDougall Distinguished Professor of Public Policy
and Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at Duke University. He is also the founding
and past director of the Center for Child and Family Policy, as well as the founder
of Family Connects International.
Dodge is a leading scholar in the development and prevention of aggressive and violent
beha
Ben Goodman
Research Scientist
Ben Goodman is a research scientist at the Center for Child and Family Policy. His
research interests focus broadly on the implementation and evaluation of population-based
interventions to reduce child maltreatment and improve parent and child health and
well-being, including the evidence-based Family Connects postpartum nurse home visiting
program. His research also examines how sources of stress and support shape the quality
of parent-child relationships, parents’ own well- being, an
Robert A. Murphy
Associate Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Dr. Murphy is a licensed clinical psychologist focused on child traumatic stress,
including its treatment and prevention and development and dissemination of evidence-based
interventions. He is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences at Duke University School of Medicine. Dr. Murphy serves as Executive Director
for the Center for Child & Family Health (CCFH), a community and three university
partnership (Duke University, the University of North Carolina
Alphabetical list of authors with Scholars@Duke profiles.

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