| Literature DB >> 31438940 |
Deborah Bamber1, Charlotte Powell1, Jaqui Long1, Rosie Garratt1, Jayne Brown1, Sally Rudge2, Tom Morris3, Nishal Bhupendra Jaicim3, Rachel Plachcinski4, Sue Dyson5, Elaine M Boyle6, Nicole Turney7, Joanne Chessman7, Ian St James-Roberts8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The 'Surviving Crying' study was designed to develop and provisionally evaluate a support service for parents of excessively crying babies, including its suitability for use in the United Kingdom (UK) National Health Service (NHS). The resulting service includes three materials: a website, a printed booklet, and a Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) programme delivered to parents by a qualified professional. This study aimed to measure whether parents used the materials and to obtain parents' and NHS professionals' evaluations of whether they are fit for purpose. Parents were asked about participating in a randomised controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the materials fully in health service use.Entities:
Keywords: Health services; Healthcare; Infant crying; Parenting
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31438940 PMCID: PMC6704568 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4430-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Parents’ use of the Surviving Crying materials
| (a) Parental report figuresa | |
| Total number of parents reporting use | 52 |
| Any materials accessed | 49 |
| Accessed website | 34b |
| Read printed materials | 24 |
| Attended practitioner CBT sessions | 24 |
| (b) Google Analytics figures for website use | |
| Number of users | 34 |
| Number of sessions | 54 |
| Average length of session | 6 min 1 s |
| Average number of unique page views per session | 6.02 |
| Average length of page view | 1 min 27 s |
Parents could use more than one package material. bWebsite accessed by 30 individual parents with four accessing it both on mobile phone and tablet/computer
Parental ratings of the Surviving Crying materials’ usefulness and use in the NHS
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| Website | 15 (44.1%) | 19 (55.9%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 34 |
| Printed booklet | 16 (66.7%) | 8 (33.3%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 24 |
| Practitioner CBT sessions | 20 (83.3%) | 4 (16.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 24 |
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| Website | 28 (82.3%) | 6 (17.6%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 34 |
| Printed booklet | 17 (70.8%) | 7 (29.2%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 24 |
| Practitioner CBT sessions | 20 (83.3%) | 4 (16.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 24 |
HV contact with the study materialsa
| Total Number of HVs | 96 |
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| Study website | |
| Seen directly: n contacts | 29 |
| Told about by parents: n contacts | 4 |
| Told about by colleagues: n contacts | 25 |
| Not seen or heard about the website: n (%) HVs | 36 (37.5) |
| Study printed booklet | |
| Seen directly: n contacts | 27 |
| Told about by parents: n contacts | 3 |
| Told about by colleagues: n contacts | 23 |
| Not seen or heard about the booklet: n (%) of HVs | 45 (47) |
| CBT session material | |
| Seen directly: n contacts | 8 |
| Told about by parents: n contacts | 12 |
| Told about by colleagues: n contacts | 17 |
| Not seen or heard about the CBT material: n (%) of HVs | 54 (56) |
aHVs could have had more than one type of contact with each material, so that numbers of contacts may not equal numbers of HVs
HV ratings of the Surviving Crying materials helpfulness and suitability for inclusion in the NHS
| Helpfulness of material for parents (Total | Very helpful | Helpful | Not helpful | n |
| Website n (%) | 30 (69.8%) | 11 (25.6%) | 2 (4.7%) | 43 |
| Printed booklet n (%) | 26 (61.9%) | 14 (33.3%) | 2 (4.8%) | 42 |
| Practitioner CBT sessions n (%) | 28 (73.7%) | 8 (21.1%) | 2 (5.3%) | 38 |
| Materials should be routinely included in the NHS (Total | Very suitable | Suitable | Not suitable | N |
| Website n (%) | 23 (69.7%) | 8 (24.2%) | 2 (6.1%) | 33 |
| Printed booklet n (%) | 20 (58.8%) | 11 (32.4%) | 3 (8.8%) | 34 |
| Practitioner CBT Sessions n (%) | 17 (60.7%) | 7 (25%) | 4 (14.3%) | 28 |