Not exact matches
Pediatric Primary Care to Help Prevent Child Maltreatment: The Safe Environment for Every Kid (SEEK) Model Dubowitz, Feigelman, Lane, & Kim Pediatrics, 123 (3), 2009 Evaluates the Safe Environment for Every Kid (SEEK) model designed to enhance pediatric primary care and better address major risk factors for maltre
Primary Care to Help Prevent Child Maltreatment: The Safe Environment for Every Kid (SEEK) Model Dubowitz, Feigelman, Lane, & Kim Pediatrics, 123 (3), 2009 Evaluates the Safe Environment for Every Kid (SEEK) model designed to enhance pediatric primary care and better address major risk factors for maltreatm
Care to
Help Prevent Child Maltreatment: The Safe Environment for Every Kid (SEEK) Model Dubowitz, Feigelman, Lane, & Kim Pediatrics, 123 (3), 2009 Evaluates the Safe Environment for Every Kid (SEEK) model designed to enhance
pediatric primary care and better address major risk factors for maltre
primary care and better address major risk factors for maltreatm
care and better address major risk factors for maltreatment.
Specific home visitation programs, especially with nurses supporting parents prenatally and then after the baby is born, have been carefully evaluated.17 - 19 Parenting programs also offer valuable guidance and can be effective, such as the Triple P intervention.20 Another example is the Safe Environment for Every Kid (SEEK) model of
pediatric primary care.21 Building on the relationship between pediatrician and family, SEEK identifies and
helps address prevalent risk factors such as parental depression.
Promising school - based interventions (Gross et al., 2003; Reid, Webster - Stratton, & Hammond, 2003) may not be useful if ODD symptoms occur primarily at home, and interventions and referrals originating in
pediatric primary care offer certain advantages: (a) other than teachers, physicians have the most professional contact with the families of preschoolers; (b) pediatricians report that research on the role of the
primary care provider in treating mental health problems is important to them (Chien et al., 2006); and (c) parents tend to trust physicians» opinions, and pediatricians» recommendations are the best predictor of
help - seeking for preschoolers» behavior problems (Lavigne et al., 1993).
Training
pediatric residents in a
primary care clinic to
help address psychosocial problems and prevent child maltreatment.
The objectives of this study were to examine the effectiveness of Safe Environment for Every Kid (SEEK) with enhanced
pediatric primary care in
helping reduce child maltreatment.