| Literature DB >> 24151552 |
Rosamund Bryar1, Sandra Anto-Awuakye, Janice Christie, Claire Davis, Karen Plumb.
Abstract
Families with children living in areas of high deprivation face multiple health and social challenges, and this high level of need has impacts on the work of health practitioners working in such areas. All families in the UK with children under five years have access to health visiting services, and health visitors have a key role in mitigating the effects of deprivation by addressing health needs through evidence based practice. This paper reports the first stage of a project in Tower Hamlets, London, an area of significant deprivation, which aims to develop an evidence-based toolkit to support health visitors in their practice with families. The first stage used a modified Delphi process to identify the priority health needs of families in the area between June and July 2012. The three-stage Delphi process involved 25 people: four health visitors, four other members of the health visiting service, and 17 representatives of other services working with families. A focus group event was followed by a second event where individuals completed a questionnaire ranking the 27 priorities identified in the first event. The consultation process concluded with participants completing a second questionnaire, by email, confirming or changing their prioritisation of the topics.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24151552 PMCID: PMC3782824 DOI: 10.1155/2013/780315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Res Pract ISSN: 2090-1429
Delphi participants representing stakeholder groups.
| Professional groups | Numbers |
|---|---|
| HVs | 4 |
| Nursery nurses | 2 |
| HV Managers | 2 |
| Children centre workers | 4 |
| Children centre managers | 1 |
| Breastfeeding coordinator | 1 |
| Speech and language therapists | 1 |
| Children's dietician | 1 |
| Children's physiotherapist | 1 |
| GP | 1 |
| CAMHS psychotherapist | 1 |
| DV coordinator | 1 |
| Tower Hamlets public health | 1 |
| Local parent | 1 |
| NHS Trust managers | 2 |
| Health advocate NHS | 1 |
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| Total | 25 |
Facilitation guidance for stakeholder focus group. Introduction: we have some questions that we have prepared to help you think through what people in Tower Hamlets need and what services HVs should offer. However, we don't want these to limit you in anyway. Please feel free to discuss things that you think are relevant. Note to facilitators: key questions are in the left-hand column and should be written on your flip charts in advance of the discussion.
| Key questions | Triggers if required |
|---|---|
| What types of needs to you see or know about in your area? | Tell us about local health and social needs in Tower Hamlets. |
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| What are HVs/health visiting teams currently doing in your area? | How does your service interface with health visiting? |
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| Tell us about what HVs/HV teams could do to support local community and families? | What types of needs could HVs/health visiting teams meet? |
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| In your opinion what are the most important issues or top priority needs that HVs/health visiting team should address? | What are the most important things for HVs to do? |
Examples of focus group statements related to the priority health needs.
| Topic | Example statements from Round 1 |
|---|---|
| Lack of iron and vitamins | I facilitate weaning groups, even those who are fluent they do not know about the issue of vitamin D deficiency. People are not aware that there is not enough light in the UK, and they do not know that they need to give vitamin drops until age of 5. And the mothers are not aware they themselves are also vitamin deficient, and sometimes the prescription they get from the GP contains gelatin and they cannot use that and the GPs often are not aware of that. And when they are pregnant, there is a risk to the child as well. So that is it; in Tower Hamlets there is a big issue about vitamin deficiency. (Health visitor) |
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| Mental health | One of the main issues is lower mood and depression amongst men and women. I am seeing it more and more in men. I do not understand why, could be financial, but I am seeing a lot of that and we are doing a lot of work around that. We are doing work with mothers to start off with, who are not clinically depressed for people who feel like sleeping all the time, and refuse to have an assessment done because of the stigma of being diagnosed with something. (Outreach children centre manager) |
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| Speech and language | I have worked in TH for 7 years, I'm a child psychotherapist from CAMHSs. One of the needs that really sticks out in my mind is to support parents need at the very beginning of a child's life. This is concept that you do not need to talk to babies. In CAMPHs, we come across mothers who say, “I did not know you talk with a baby”. Now the baby is 2 years old with no ability to speak or interact and being mistaken as autistic features. |
Priority needs for Health Visiting as identified by participants in Rounds 2 and 3 of the Delphi process.
| No. | Topics |
|---|---|
| 1 | Infant stimulation |
| 2 | Domestic violence |
| 3 | Speech and language |
| 4 | Vulnerable children and families |
| 5 | Mental health |
| 6 | Overfeeding/force feeding/obesity* |
| 7 | Breastfeeding/infant nutrition |
| 8 | Families with no recourse to public funds |
| 9 | Behaviour |
| 10 | Poor uptake of services |
| 11 | Physical development |
| 12 | Social support, isolation, and emotional wellbeing |
| 13 | Parent relationships |
| 14 | Weaning |
| 15 | Housing |
| 16 | Healthy eating |
| 17 | Play |
| 18 | Unemployment and socioeconomic deprivation |
| 19 | Lack of iron and vitamins |
| 20 | Dental caries |
| 21 | Within population needs |
| 22 | Addictions |
| 23 | Health promotion for families |
| 24 | First time mothers |
| 25 | Sexual health |
| 26 | Children with disability/additional needs |
| 27 | Schools** |
*Included as one category as statements concerning all three areas from participants indicated a relationship between overfeeding/force feeding and obesity.
**This category referred to the lack of school places in the borough and the difficulties this presented for parents with several children who had to make arrangements to transport children to different schools in different areas.
Additional comments returned in the Round 2 questionnaires.
| Topic | Example statements from Round 2 |
|---|---|
| Behaviour | By educating parents on strategies to managing behaviour which can be applied to all areas for example, feeding/toilet training/child development, and so forth. Then this will surely result in preventing a number of problems we see with the parent/child relationship. (HV1) |
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| Housing | Huge problem in borough having impact on development, constant moving, ability to parent, disrupted networks (professional and social), and health. |
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| Infant stimulation | Bonding/attachment is critical at an early age. Secure attachment is part of the foundation of making relationships. |