Examples of promising strategies include making home visits to families of chronically absent students,
providing nurse home visits to children with asthma, and providing school buses to transport young students to school.
Learn how Durham Connects, which
provides nurse home visits to newborns, has been shown to reduce emergency hospital care for them.
Final Report: Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic, Enhanced Yakima County Nurse - Family Partnership (EYCNFP) Program at Children's Village Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic (2013) View Abstract Describes the activities and outcomes of a federally funded demonstration project that
provided nurse home visits to low - income pregnant women with additional Healthy Marriage / Responsible Father services for clients and Mental Health Consultant services for program staff.
Not exact matches
Providing access to
Home Care and Hospice Care local home health / visiting nurses agencies or making referrals to Skilled Nursing Facilities (Nursing Homes), Acute Rehabilitation Facilities or Community Care Ho
Home Care and Hospice Care local
home health / visiting nurses agencies or making referrals to Skilled Nursing Facilities (Nursing Homes), Acute Rehabilitation Facilities or Community Care Ho
home health /
visiting nurses agencies or making referrals to Skilled
Nursing Facilities (
Nursing Homes), Acute Rehabilitation Facilities or Community Care Homes.
LORNA C. ALIPERTI APRN, IBCLC is a
nurse practitioner and lactation consultant who
provides home visits to new mothers and babies with breastfeeding problems.
As medical providers, the
nurse practitioners of New England Mothers First are able to
provide insurance covered, 60 minute
home and office
visits.
Experienced
Nurse - Midwife and IBCLC
providing home visits, prenatal breastfeeding education, and postpartum breastfeeding consultations in the Boston / Cambridge area and surrounding towns.
Some insurers will
provide home nursing visits for premature infants or even more extensive
nursing care for infants with complex medical problems.
Graduating family medicine residents have indicated they intend to
provide a broader scope of practice than that reported by current family physicians, including for prenatal care, inpatient care,
nursing home care,
home visits, and women's health procedures, according to a study in the December 8 issue of JAMA, a theme issue on medical education.
Medicare supports
home health services including
visiting nurses and therapy, but according to Steven Landers, MD, MPH, clinical associate professor at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, the current policy should be strengthened to limit fraud,
provide consistent services nationally to reduce health disparities and allow for better care coordination.
Patients were more likely to die in psychiatric hospital if their primary disease was dementia, and they had resided in a region that
provided fewer
home visits for psychiatric
nursing care or had available a larger number of psychiatric hospital beds per capita.
Extending the
Nurse Family Partnership Program, which
provides home visits from
nurses to low - income families.
Their work includes
providing specialist
nurses to
provide care during hospital stays and
visits; these
nurses can also
visit the child's
home to
provide some treatments.
Having pets in
nursing homes (be it therapy animals,
visiting furry companions or resident pets) can
provide its elderly residents a sense of joy and relief.
A therapy dog on the other hand is a dog that is trained to
provide comfort and therapy for someone - other than their owners - such as those dogs who
visit the elderly in
nursing homes or children in hospitals that need cheering up.
Well - behaved friendly dogs, cats and other household pets are sought for Project PUP, Pets Uplifting People, a program that
provides companion animal
visits to
nursing homes and retirement centers.Seminole Dog Fanciers Association coordinates the Seminole County branch of the project and will hold its screening of pet temperament and behavior for potential participants at 7 p.m. May 14.
The demands of your job and family combined with the
visiting hours of the
nursing home may only
provide you with a small window during which you are available to see your loved one.
You can compare the following attorneys» qualifications and can
visit their websites or call their offices to learn more about the services they can
provide in relation to
Nursing Home Abuse claims and lawsuits.
A cover letter for a registered
nurse can also be used for a staff
nurse, and can be used to apply for a position in a hospital, private / public clinics,
home for seniors, or to work for an agency that
provides home visits or for private clients.
This cover letter for a Registered
Nurse can also be used for a staff nurse, and can be used to apply for a position in a hospital, private / public clinics, home for seniors, or to work for an agency that provides home visits or for private cli
Nurse can also be used for a staff
nurse, and can be used to apply for a position in a hospital, private / public clinics, home for seniors, or to work for an agency that provides home visits or for private cli
nurse, and can be used to apply for a position in a hospital, private / public clinics,
home for seniors, or to work for an agency that
provides home visits or for private clients.
The services we
provide are incredibly diverse and include such activities as conducting public health
nurse home visits for moms and babies,
providing medical...
Will conduct
home visits on behalf of the clinic to
provide education and Su Clinica's health services upon the request of a physician,
nurse, or social worker, or the patient.
St. Peters Community Clinic, St. Kitts • WI 2006 — 2007 Internship
Nurse Provided home visits to diabetic patients, postnatal and first time mothers.
Nurses also
provide a needs - based «enhanced» service, which involves additional
home and / or centre
visits.
Durham Connects
provides in -
home nurse visits to parents of newborns that live in Durham County.
Durham Connects
provides in -
home nurse visits free of charge to ALL parents of newborns in Durham County, North Carolina.
By
providing registered
nurses and using our proven program model of
home visiting, we are literally saving babies» lives and giving them a chance to grow.
Nurses for Newborns
provides a safety net for families most at - risk in order to prevent infant mortality, child abuse and neglect by
providing in -
home nursing visits which promote healthcare, education, and positive parenting skills.
The federal Maternal, Infant and Early Childhood
Home Visiting (MIECHV) program, which supports the implementation of Healthy Families Florida, Nurse - Family Partnership and Parents as Teachers in 21 high - need communities, accounted for 1,500 of the families served and 15,500 of the home visits provided in the state during this per
Home Visiting (MIECHV) program, which supports the implementation of Healthy Families Florida,
Nurse - Family Partnership and Parents as Teachers in 21 high - need communities, accounted for 1,500 of the families served and 15,500 of the
home visits provided in the state during this per
home visits provided in the state during this period.
For some families,
nurse home visiting is augmented by the assistance of NFN's Community Health Workers who
provide language interpretation and / or enhanced cultural competency, assistance with material and community resources, and peer support for the infant's caregivers.
Home visiting is
provided by trained family support workers with qualifications in
nursing, teaching, or allied disciplines.
France
provides free prenatal care and
home visits by midwives or
nurses to
provide education about smoking, nutrition, alcohol and other drug use, housing, and other health - related issues.
Home visiting is deeply rooted in history, going back at least to Elizabethan times in England and endorsed as a strategy by Florence Nightingale in the 19th century.2, 3 Home visiting existed in the United States in the 1880s when public health nurses and social workers provided in - home education and health care to urban women and child
Home visiting is deeply rooted in history, going back at least to Elizabethan times in England and endorsed as a strategy by Florence Nightingale in the 19th century.2, 3
Home visiting existed in the United States in the 1880s when public health nurses and social workers provided in - home education and health care to urban women and child
Home visiting existed in the United States in the 1880s when public health
nurses and social workers
provided in -
home education and health care to urban women and child
home education and health care to urban women and children.
Existing interventions among Asian populations focus mainly on imparting practical skills to caregivers of patients with cancer requiring palliative care, through
home - based care or
home visits from
nurses, 21 — 23 with an emphasis on coping with end - of - life issues and bereavement.24, 25 However, interventions for caregivers of non-palliative care recipients tend to be delivered via the phone26 or over the internet, 27 while others work with couple dyads, where one spouse
provides care for the other who has cancer.28
Home visitors working in close collaboration with PCPs providing 2 to 4 home visits per month for the first year of life resulted in higher numbers of well - child visits at 12 months and lower likelihood of being seen for injuries and ingestions.40 The REACH - Futures program in Chicago, which uses registered nurses from a community clinic who are teamed with public health trained community health workers for an infant HV program, resulted in improved immunization rates and retention in the primary care clini
Home visitors working in close collaboration with PCPs
providing 2 to 4
home visits per month for the first year of life resulted in higher numbers of well - child visits at 12 months and lower likelihood of being seen for injuries and ingestions.40 The REACH - Futures program in Chicago, which uses registered nurses from a community clinic who are teamed with public health trained community health workers for an infant HV program, resulted in improved immunization rates and retention in the primary care clini
home visits per month for the first year of life resulted in higher numbers of well - child
visits at 12 months and lower likelihood of being seen for injuries and ingestions.40 The REACH - Futures program in Chicago, which uses registered
nurses from a community clinic who are teamed with public health trained community health workers for an infant HV program, resulted in improved immunization rates and retention in the primary care clinic.41
Home visits are conducted by registered
nurses who are specially trained to
provide the
visits to low - income, first - time mothers, beginning prenatally and continuing through the child's second birthday.
Few prevention programs have been rigorously evaluated, and only a few have proven effective.60, 61 Health - care based prevention programs, including parent education programs to reduce rates of abusive head trauma, and improving physician ambulatory care practices to help families decrease risk factors for child maltreatment have shown good initial results, but require further evaluation.62, 63 Specific intensive
home visitation programs such as
nurse home visiting programs for first - time mothers have proven to be both clinically and cost effective in preventing maltreatment.64, 65 However, a program of
nurse home visitation has been found ineffective as a treatment model for abusive and neglectful families, highlighting the importance of primary prevention, as well as the need to rigorously evaluate potential treatments for abusive families.66 Child welfare services are historically structured as short - term interventions that monitor families for recidivism,
provide parenting education and assist with referrals to community - based services.
The
Nurse Family Partnership program
provides home visits by registered
nurses to first - time mothers, beginning during pregnancy and continuing through the child's second birthday.
The research suggests that strategies to prevent maltreatment should begin during pregnancy and encompass both population - wide approaches that aim to
provide pregnant women / parents and new babies with access to wide - ranging universal support (such as Population level Triple - P), alongside the provision of targeted approaches (i.e., intensive
home visiting such as
Nurse Family Partnership) to families who face additional risks that increase the vulnerability of the baby.
Texas continues to support the
Nurse Family Partnership, and in 2013, the state adopted legislation that
provides $ 7.9 million to serve at - risk pregnant women and families using evidence - based and promising practice
home visiting programs.
A recent review offers ambiguous support for the relation between
home visitation and reductions in child maltreatment.2 The findings from several large - scale
home - visitation efforts have shown disappointing short - term results in reducing family violence and child maltreatment.4, 9 A 15 - year follow - up study of the Elmira trial families, however,
provided the first evidence from a randomized trial for the long - term effects of
home visitation on reducing child maltreatment.10 Results from the follow - up showed that
nurse -
visited families had half as many child maltreatment reports as families in the comparison group.
Programs That Work:
Nurse Family Partnership Promising Practices Network & RAND Corporation (2009) Describes the goals of the
Nurse - Family Partnership program (previously named the Prenatal and Infancy
Nurse Home Visitation Program) that provides home visits by registered nurses to first - time mothers, beginning during pregnancy and continuing through the child's second birth
Home Visitation Program) that
provides home visits by registered nurses to first - time mothers, beginning during pregnancy and continuing through the child's second birth
home visits by registered
nurses to first - time mothers, beginning during pregnancy and continuing through the child's second birthday.
Our registered
nurses make
home visits to
provide health - care assessments, education and positive parenting skills in effort to prevent infant mortality and child abuse / neglect.
During
home visits, the
nurses promoted 3 aspects of maternal functioning: health - related behaviors during pregnancy and the early years of the child's life, the care parents
provide to their children, and maternal life - course development (family planning, educational achievement, and participation in the work force).
Improving the
Nurse - Family Partnership in Community Practice Olds, Donelan - McCall, O'Brien, MacMillan, Jack, Jenkins, Dunlap, et al. (2013) Pediatrics, 132 (2)
Provides a framework and illustrations to address challenges associated with the
Nurse - Family Partnership
home -
visiting model and its implementation, as well as promising approaches for addressing these challenges.
The workshop
provided an overview of MIHOPE research activities, and representatives from Early Head Start —
Home - Based Option (EHS), Healthy Families America (HFA), Nurse - Family Partnership (NFP), and Parents as Teachers (PAT) shared insights into the experiences of home visiting program staff participating in resea
Home - Based Option (EHS), Healthy Families America (HFA),
Nurse - Family Partnership (NFP), and Parents as Teachers (PAT) shared insights into the experiences of
home visiting program staff participating in resea
home visiting program staff participating in research.
• The President is proposing to expand the Administration's evidence - based
home visiting initiative, through which states are implementing voluntary programs that
provide nurses, social workers, and other professionals to meet with at - risk families in their
homes and connect them to assistance that impacts a child's health, development, and ability to learn.
Home -
visiting programs, such as the one that Avelar De Andrade is involved in, pair low - income struggling parents with trained
nurses, social workers or educators, who
provide support throughout the stressful first years of their children's lives.
Universal
home visiting services to families of newborns and young children is
provided in most countries in the region by a community
nurse or health worker.
Home visiting connects families with trained
nurses and social workers who
provide pre - and postnatal support; coaching on topics like pregnancy health and child development; counseling on education and job opportunities; and much more.