| Literature DB >> 30582136 |
Ingrid Tyler1, Judith Lynam2, Patricia O'Campo3, Heather Manson4, Meghan Lynch5, Behnoosh Dashti6, Nicole Turner7, Andrea Feller8, Elizabeth Lee Ford-Jones9, Sue Makin10, Christine Loock2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To better understand how social pediatric initiatives (SPIs) enact equitable, integrated, embedded approaches with high-needs children and families while facilitating proportionate distribution of health resources.Entities:
Keywords: Community-based practice; Empowerment; Health equity; Interprofessional practice; Partnership working; Professional education; Realist methodology; Social pediatrics; Trust; Whole child
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30582136 PMCID: PMC6565657 DOI: 10.1007/s00038-018-1190-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Public Health ISSN: 1661-8556 Impact factor: 3.380
Fig. 1Flow diagram of search, screening and inclusion of articles CMO context-mechanism-outcome, SPI social pediatrics initiative
Summary of included Social Pediatric Initiatives (SPI), demonstrating health equity, provider integration and community embeddedness, including SPI family of articles, activities and reported outcomes
| Program name | Author, year | Study type/ Method | Location | Population/Practitioner | Activities | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early explorers | Barlow and Coe ( | Qualitative; semi-structured interviews | Outpatient baby clinics, England | Low-income families (children under the age of 5)/health practitioner and bECP | bECPs engaging parents in common clinic play area allowing for the opportunity to identify vulnerable families that required referrals | Enhanced service provided within traditional child health clinics (qualitative report) Increased access to hard-to-reach patients (qualitative report) Increase access to services (qualitative report) |
| Coe and Barlow ( | Descriptive | |||||
| Keeping Infants Nourished and Developing (KIND) | Beck et al. ( | Quantitative/ time series analysis and descriptive statistics | Hospital medical center, USA | Food-insecure families with infants attending clinic/pediatricians, pediatric residents, and medical students | Collaboration linking food-insecure families to supplementary infant formula, education materials, clinic and community resources or public benefit programs | Increased lead test and developmental screen Increased referrals to social work or medical legal partnership Increase well-baby visits |
| Burkhardt et al. ( | Quantitative; chart review | Increased identification rate of food insecurity | ||||
| DentCare | Diamond et al. ( | Process evaluation; interview and observation | Harlem and Washington Heights Neighbourhoods, USA | Children in low-income neighborhoods/Columbia University’s School of Oral and Dental Surgery | Provided preventive dental services in schools through collaboration of medical clinics and community-based organizations | Identify major modifications to program required to raise community service to the same priority as education Need for different implementation strategies in different communities Collaboration with community clinics for community linkage |
| Albert et al. ( | Descriptive | |||||
| WE CARE | Garg et al. ( | Quantitative; randomized control trial | Outpatient clinic, USA | Low-income families (2 months to 10 years)/pediatric residents | Patient self-administered screening tool and provider community resource book | Greater number of psychosocial issues discussed Received more referrals Greater likelihood of contacting a community resource |
| Responsive, Interdisciplinary Child-Community Health Education and Research (RICHER) initiative | Wong et al. ( | Mixed; Patient interview and survey | Downtown Eastside neighbourhood, Canada | Residents of one of Canada’s lowest income areas/health-care providers | Interdisciplinary collaboration to facilitate access to programs that affect aSDOH | Provider interpersonal style associated with parent reported empowerment scores |
| Lynam et al. ( | Qualitative; participant observations | Recommendations on fostering engagement and use of indigenous knowledge | ||||
| Lynam et al. ( | Qualitative; interviews | Illustrate interdisciplinary partnerships enabling clinicians to provide supports to address aSDOH | ||||
| Lynam et al. ( | Descriptive | |||||
| Early Childhood Oral Health Program | Maher et al. ( | Evaluation; document review, surveys, interviews | Australia | Infants, young children and their parents/child health professionals | Shared responsibility for oral health, involving a partnership between child health professionals, oral health professionals, and parents of young children | Models of shared responsibility between parents, health professionals and oral health professionals can facilitate primary prevention (routine incorporation of oral health promotion and early identification) |
aSDOH social determinants of health
bECP early childhood provider
Fig. 2Configurations of four identified demi-regularities, emphasizing thematic results