| Literature DB >> 32430455 |
Francesca L Cavallaro1, Ruth Gilbert1, Linda Wijlaars1, Eilis Kennedy2, Ailsa Swarbrick3, Jan van der Meulen4, Katie Harron5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Almost 20 000 babies are born to teenage mothers each year in England, with poorer outcomes for mothers and babies than among older mothers. A nurse home visitation programme in the USA was found to improve a wide range of outcomes for young mothers and their children. However, a randomised controlled trial in England found no effect on short-term primary outcomes, although cognitive development up to age 2 showed improvement. Our study will use linked routinely collected health, education and social care data to evaluate the real-world effects of the Family Nurse Partnership (FNP) on child outcomes up to age 7, with a focus on identifying whether the FNP works better for particular groups of families, thereby informing programme targeting and resource allocation. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We will construct a retrospective cohort of all women aged 13-24 years giving birth in English NHS hospitals between 2010 and 2017, linking information on mothers and children from FNP programme data, Hospital Episodes Statistics and the National Pupil Database. To assess the effectiveness of FNP, we will compare outcomes for eligible mothers ever and never enrolled in FNP, and their children, using two analysis strategies to adjust for measured confounding: propensity score matching and analyses adjusting for maternal characteristics up to enrolment/28 weeks gestation. Outcomes of interest include early childhood development, childhood unplanned hospital admissions for injury or maltreatment-related diagnoses and children in care. Subgroup analyses will determine whether the effect of FNP varied according to maternal characteristics (eg, age and education). ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The Nottingham Research Ethics Committee approved this study. Mothers participating in FNP were supportive of our planned research. Results will inform policy-makers for targeting home visiting programmes. Methodological findings on the accuracy and reliability of cross-sectoral data linkage will be of interest to researchers. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: child protection; community child health; health informatics; public health
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32430455 PMCID: PMC7239518 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-038530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Data flows diagram. Note: items in italics are identifiers. CIN, Child in Need; CLA, Child Looked After; FNP, Family Nurse Partnership; GP, general practitioner; HES, Hospital Episode Statistics; NHS, National Health Service; NPD, National Pupil Database; ONS SRS, Office for National Statistics Secure Research Service; PDS, Personal Demographics Service; UCL, University College London.
Figure 2Family Nurse Partnership evaluation outcomes, data sources and selected maternal characteristics. HES, Hospital Episode Statistics; NPD, National Pupil Database.
Family Nurse Partnership evaluation outcomes and data sources
| Domains | Outcomes | Years after birth | HES | NPD* | ONS |
| Child abuse and neglect | Unplanned hospital admissions for any injury or maltreatment-related diagnosis (using ICD10 code lists) | 0–7 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Healthcare use | Unplanned hospital admissions (any diagnoses) | 0–7 | ✓ | ||
| Education | Good level of development in early years assessment | 5 | ✓ | ||
| Maternal adversity | A&E visits (any diagnoses) | 0–7 | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Reproductive outcomes | Subsequent deliveries within 18 months of index birth | 0–2 | ✓ | ||
| Education | Key Stage 4 and 5 assessment† | 0–7 | ✓ | ||
*Including the School Census, Child in Need Census and Child Looked After databases.
†Among mothers without Key Stage 4/5 attainment at birth.
‡School attendance information is collected up to age 15.
HES, Hospital Episode Statistics; NPD, National Pupil Database; ONS, Office for National Statistics; SEN, special educational needs.