| Literature DB >> 26474809 |
Michael Robling1, Marie-Jet Bekkers2, Kerry Bell3, Christopher C Butler4, Rebecca Cannings-John2, Sue Channon2, Belen Corbacho Martin3, John W Gregory5, Kerry Hood2, Alison Kemp5, Joyce Kenkre6, Alan A Montgomery7, Gwenllian Moody2, Eleri Owen-Jones2, Kate Pickett8, Gerry Richardson9, Zoë E S Roberts5, Sarah Ronaldson3, Julia Sanders10, Eugena Stamuli3, David Torgerson3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many countries now offer support to teenage mothers to help them to achieve long-term socioeconomic stability and to give a successful start to their children. The Family Nurse Partnership (FNP) is a licensed intensive home-visiting intervention developed in the USA and introduced into practice in England that involves up to 64 structured home visits from early pregnancy until the child's second birthday by specially recruited and trained family nurses. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of giving the programme to teenage first-time mothers on infant and maternal outcomes up to 24 months after birth.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26474809 PMCID: PMC4707160 DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)00392-X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet ISSN: 0140-6736 Impact factor: 79.321
FigureTrial profile
FNP=Family-Nurse Partnership. ED=emergency department. GP=general practitioner. HSCIC=Health & Social Care Information Centre. TLP=late pregnancy timepoint. *Two women registered with GP outside study area, one not pregnant at first scan. †One woman not Gillick competent, one woman registered with GP outside study area.
Sociodemographic characteristics at baseline
| Age (years) | 17·9 (17·0–18·8) | 17·9 (16·9–18·8) | |
| Gestation | |||
| 16 weeks' or more | 330/807 (41%) | 328/810 (40%) | |
| Less than 16 weeks' | 477/807 (59%) | 482/810 (59%) | |
| Smoker | |||
| No | 331/759 (44%) | 324/766 (42%) | |
| Yes | 428/759 (56%) | 442/766 (58%) | |
| Ethnic origin | |||
| White | 711 (88%) | 714 (88%) | |
| Mixed | 47 (6%) | 42 (5%) | |
| Asian | 16 (2%) | 11 (1%) | |
| Black | 31 (4%) | 40 (5%) | |
| Other | 3 (<1%) | 3 (<1%) | |
| Language usually spoken at home by participants | |||
| English only | 768 (95%) | 775 (96%) | |
| English and other language | 39 (5%) | 33 (4%) | |
| Other language or languages only | 1 (<1%) | 2 (<1%) | |
| Relationship status with baby's father | |||
| Married | 9 (1%) | 11 (1%) | |
| Separated | 79 (10%) | 86 (11%) | |
| Closely involved or boyfriend | 613 (76%) | 609 (75%) | |
| Just friends | 107 (13%) | 104 (13%) | |
| Living with parents | |||
| Both | 181 (22%) | 171 (21%) | |
| One | 318 (39%) | 349 (43%) | |
| Neither | 309 (38%) | 290 (36%) | |
| Living with father of baby | |||
| Yes | 184/736 (25%) | 184/744 (25%) | |
| No | 552/736 (75%) | 560/744 (75%) | |
| Not in education employment or training (NEET) status | |||
| Yes | 333/695 (48%) | 330/685 (48%) | |
| No | 362/695 (52%) | 355/685 (52%) | |
| Has a paid job | |||
| Yes | 174 (21%) | 164 (20%) | |
| No | 634 (78%) | 646 (80%) | |
| In receipt of government welfare payments | |||
| Yes | 301/808 (37%) | 283/808 (35%) | |
| No | 507/808 (63%) | 525/808 (65%) | |
| Ever been homeless | |||
| Yes | 144 (18%) | 170 (21%) | |
| No | 664 (82%) | 640 (79%) | |
| Highest parental qualification | |||
| Up to post-graduate | 108/805 (13%) | 111/810 (14%) | |
| Up to A-level | 172/805 (21%) | 176/810 (22%) | |
| Overseas or other qualifications | 79/805 (10%) | 80/810 (10%) | |
| None of these | 130/805 (16%) | 129/810 (16%) | |
| Do not know | 316/805 (39%) | 314/810 (39%) | |
| IMD score | 38·3 (24·9–52·4) | 38·2 (25·5–51·6) | |
Data are n (%), n/N (%), or median (IQR). FNP=Family Nurse Partnership programme plus usual care. IMD=Index of Multiple Deprivation.
Cotinine-calibrated smoking status at baseline.
NEET status applicable only to those older than 16 years at end of previous academic year.
High school diploma equivalent.
Higher IMD score indicates greater deprivation.
N=802.
N=804.
Primary outcome results
| Total mothers | 808 | 810 | 1618 | .. | .. | .. | ||
| Smoking at late pregnancy | ||||||||
| Women who smoked | 304/547 (56%) | 306/545 (56%) | 610/1092 (56%) | −0·6% (−7·3 to 6·2) | 0·90 | 0·51 | ||
| Unadjusted mean cigarettes smoked per day | 8·8 (5·6) | 8·4 (5·9) | 8·6 (5·8) | .. | 0·12 | 0·75 | ||
| Women who did not smoke | 243/547 (44%) | 239/545 (44%) | 482/1092 (44%) | .. | .. | .. | ||
| Pregnancies within 24 months | ||||||||
| Women who were recorded as pregnant within 24 months | 426/643 (66%) | 427/646 (66%) | 853/1289 (66%) | 0·2% (−5·8 to 6·1) | 1·01 | 0·92 | ||
| Women not pregnant within 24 months | 217/643 (34%) | 219/646 (34%) | 436/1289 (34%) | .. | .. | .. | ||
| Total babies | 742 | 768 | 1510 | .. | .. | .. | ||
| Birthweight | ||||||||
| Unadjusted mean birthweight (g) | 3217·4 (618·0) | 3197·5 (581·5) | 3207·3 (599·6) | .. | 20·75 | 0·50 | ||
| At least one emergency attendance or admission within 24 months of birth | ||||||||
| Emergency attendance or admission | 587/725 (81%) | 577/753 (77%) | 1164/1478 (79%) | 4·3% (0·2 to 8·5) | 1·32 | 0·03 | ||
| No emergency attendance or admission | 138 (19%) | 176 (23%) | 314 (21%) | |||||
Data are n (%), n/N (%), or mean (SD), unless otherwise specified. FNP group=Family Nurse Partnership programme plus usual care.
Adjusted for stratification (site) and minimisation variables (gestational age and smoking status at recruitment, and first or preferred language); one participant did not have two minimisation variables recorded and was excluded from all analyses.
Data were missing for 526 women: 421 not interviewed at late pregnancy, 40 not asked smoking questions as participant had given birth, and 65 had incomplete self-report or missing cotinine at baseline.
Adjusted odds ratio for FNP versus usual care.
Adjusted difference in means for FNP minus usual care.
Data were missing for 329 women: 154 were missing due to incomplete follow-up (withdrawals or left the general practitioner practice before 2 years no subsequent pregnancy flagged), 175 where both maternal self-report and primary care records (taken as the most reliable sources) were missing and no subsequent pregnancy was flagged in any of the other data sources (inpatients, outpatients, abortions).
Data were missing for 32 children: five children could not be linked to Health and Social Care Information Centre data; the remaining 27 were withdrawals that had no event recorded up to point of withdrawal.