Several home visiting programs funded by a patchwork of public and private funding exist in New Mexico, but experts say they fall far short of the need.
Over the last four decades,
several home visiting programs have undergone rigorous tests of their effectiveness.
In order to accurately measure the efficacy of
several home visiting programs, a comprehensive assessment that includes measures of multiple child and family outcomes at various points in time should be favoured.
Not exact matches
Some
programs require multiple
visits or require you to stay in the child's
home country for a minimum amount of time, which might be up to
several weeks.
This report provides county - by - county data on the availability of voluntary
home visiting programs in California, as well as
several estimates of the need for these
programs.
There are
several different models for coordinated intake: in most cases, coordinated intake workers conduct outreach to families and complete the Coordinated Intake Assessment Tool (CIAT), which collects
program eligibility information before referring families to an appropriate
home visiting program, or other community services.
The Annie E. Casey Foundation report cites
several types of existing
programs that provide a platform for the two - generation approach, including
home visiting.
Indeed, two earlier issues of The Future of Children, one in 1993 and the other in 1999, have focused on
home -
visiting programs for families with young children, 2 and
several articles in other issues of the journal have also touched on the topic.3 A number of good meta - analyses have been published in other journals as well, although some include only randomized experiments while others include both experimental and non-experimental evidence.4
Increased parenting responsivity and sensitivity As
several studies have documented,
home -
visiting programs are often associated with parental gains in responsivity and sensitivity in their interactions with their children.
Many less costly and less structured
home visiting models have been tested, using social workers or other professionals, rather than nurses, but none has achieved the same success or consistency as the Olds
program with nurses.36 The Olds model, now called the Nurse Family Partnership, has been successfully evaluated in
several sites and is now replicated in more than 200 counties and many countries.
In the Elmira demonstration, intervention mothers were less likely to punish or physically restrain their children than mothers in the control group.62 Among
home -
visited families who participated in Early Start, less punitive parenting was observed, though the effect was modest.63
Several other
programs have identified reductions in the frequency with which mothers spanked their children at thirty - six months, including Healthy Families San Diego, 64 Early Head Start, 65 and IHDP.66 No effects on harsh parenting were found in the CCDP.67
We next review
several major
home -
visiting programs, all of which have been evaluated using randomized controlled trials, and thus represent higher - quality evaluations than those using non-randomized trials.
She spoke about one of
several interventions aiming to enhance the
home visiting programs, strategies to increase father participation.
The models also are not clear in the protocol for exiting a family that has not had a
home visit in
several weeks or months, and whether to indicate that such a family has completed the
program or not.
As part of the federal Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood
Home Visiting Program (MIECHV), Family Connects is now being implemented across the country including
several new communities in Texas.
Evaluations of
home visiting programs show that MIECHV - funded services are associated with lower rates of domestic violence in a variety of contexts.42 For example,
several evaluations of the Nurse - Family Partnership (NFP), an MIECVH - funded
home visiting model operating in 42 states, showed that families who participate in the
program across different locations were less likely to report domestic violence.43 In one study, about 7 percent of participating families in NFP reported experiencing domestic violence, compared with nearly 14 percent of nonparticipating families.44
We applied our portfolio of measures to video - recorded
visits in
several studies, including MIHOPE (the national evaluation of the MIECHV
Program), a randomized trial of a communication training course, and a study of the interactive effects of
home visitor and parent preferences as influences on how they communicate.
The collaborative includes state agencies, statewide
home visiting organizations, over 30 individual
home visiting program sites using
several different evidence - based models, and an academic partner with expertise in early childhood services evaluative research.
Home Visiting in Kansas includes several evidence - based and universal home visiting programs and approaches to support families and children from pregnancy until a child enters kindergar
Home Visiting in Kansas includes several evidence - based and universal home visiting programs and approaches to support families and children from pregnancy until a child enters kinde
Visiting in Kansas includes
several evidence - based and universal
home visiting programs and approaches to support families and children from pregnancy until a child enters kindergar
home visiting programs and approaches to support families and children from pregnancy until a child enters kinde
visiting programs and approaches to support families and children from pregnancy until a child enters kindergarten.
McDonough is a data manager who has worked on
several projects at MDRC: Supporting Healthy Marriage (SHM) is an evaluation of marriage education
programs targeting low - income, racially and ethnically diverse married couples; Head Start CARES (Classroom - based Approaches and Resources for Emotion and Social skill promotion) is a national evaluation of three evidence - based strategies to improve the social and emotional development of children in Head Start; the Mother and Infant
Home Visiting Program Evaluation (MIHOPE) aims to build knowledge about the effectiveness of the new federally funded Maternal, Infant and Early Childhood
Home -
Visiting Program (MIECHV) in improving outcomes for at - risk children and families.
When establishing new
home visiting programs or expanding existing services using an evidence - based
home visiting model, communities should consider
several factors in order to ensure high quality service delivery that is true to the intent of those who developed the model and that meets expressed community need.
The Help Me Grow
Home Visiting program has been in existence for
several years.
A
program's theory of change may incorporate
home visiting for
several reasons.
For example, when Anne Duggan and her colleagues evaluated Hawaii's Healthy Start
home visiting program, they found that benefits to families depended on which of
several agencies administered the
program.
An Advisory Board comprised of researches, state
home visiting program directors, and representatives from
several home visiting models, reviewed the team's analysis and made final recommendations.
Family Spirit is the only evidence - based
home visiting program that was developed in partnership with
several tribes specifically for American Indian communities.
Both
programs expired on September 30 despite clear evidence and
several warnings that if Congress did not take action, children and families would lose access to health coverage and necessary
home visiting services.
To help overcome this challenge,
several states joined with The Pew Charitable Trusts beginning in 2013 to develop the
Home Visiting Data for Performance Initiative, the first significant effort to promote common performance measures that states can adopt to determine whether their goals are being achieved across a portfolio of home visiting progr
Home Visiting Data for Performance Initiative, the first significant effort to promote common performance measures that states can adopt to determine whether their goals are being achieved across a portfolio of home visiting p
Visiting Data for Performance Initiative, the first significant effort to promote common performance measures that states can adopt to determine whether their goals are being achieved across a portfolio of
home visiting progr
home visiting p
visiting programs.
Several states have passed legislation to make
home visiting programs more effective and accountable by requiring the agencies that oversee them to set goals and measure results.