Rural service coordination programming for women using substances and their families.

Lesley Cottrell, Charlotte Workman, Melina Danko, Ellis Walker, Anthony Dmytrijuk, Susan Harrison, Mikisha Lee, Ashleigh McKinsey, Mark C Smith
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Abstract

Background: Women experiencing substance use during their pregnancies or after the birth of a child report being fearful of losing their children based on care, stigmatized when seeking assistance, and barriers to care such as having to provide the same information to different providers, and having to repeat their lived experiences with substance use in detail. Particularly these service barriers can be confusing, complicated, and difficult to follow, which could lead to non-compliance or not seeking services.

Objectives: We evaluated components of a service coordination program for women experiencing substance use, their children, and larger families who help with caregiving. We examined stakeholder interest in the program, feasibility providing services over time, and initial program effectiveness.

Design: Participant enrollment and outcomes as well as service coordination activities provided over a 4-year period was gathered across three demonstration site locations (a birthing hospital, reunification program, and home visiting program).

Methods: Program information was gathered from needs assessment data, health survey data from enrolled caregivers and infants, training evaluations, and budget recordings of direct aid. In this mixed method design, we examined potential differences between baseline and the last assessment for women and children enrolled in the program. We also utilized univariate analyses of variance to examine the main effects of maternal and infant characteristics on final maternal and infant outcomes.

Results: Three sites enrolled 182 women and families for program services. Patient navigators provided direct aid, training, goal setting, and service coordination and planning. Families remained in the program, on average, 655 days and were satisfied with the services received. Respondents thought the program elements were easy to implement within the rural setting. The program effectively addressed basic needs, violence (p < 0.001; η2 = 0.34 (0.05-0.53)), infant development (p < 0.02; η2 = 0.51 (0.13-0.61)), and maternal depression (p < 0.05; η2 = 0.9 (0.00-0.22)). Select outcomes did differ by site.

Conclusion: A service coordination model utilizing a patient navigator role to coordinate client services coupled with an approach that serves the infant and caregiver needs was feasible and desirable by all stakeholders within a rural setting. Service coordination effectively impacted select caregiver and infant outcomes.

为吸毒妇女及其家庭制定农村服务协调计划。
背景:在怀孕期间或分娩后使用药物的妇女报告称,她们害怕因护理而失去孩子,在寻求帮助时会受到羞辱,并且在护理方面存在障碍,例如必须向不同的服务提供者提供相同的信息,以及必须详细重复她们使用药物的生活经历。尤其是这些服务障碍可能令人困惑、复杂、难以遵循,从而导致不遵守规定或不寻求服务:我们对一项服务协调计划的组成部分进行了评估,该计划的对象是有药物使用经历的妇女、她们的子女以及帮助照顾她们的大家庭。我们考察了利益相关者对该计划的兴趣、长期提供服务的可行性以及计划的初步效果:设计:我们收集了三个示范点(分娩医院、团聚计划和家访计划)的参与者注册情况、结果以及 4 年内提供的服务协调活动:方法:我们从需求评估数据、登记的照顾者和婴儿的健康调查数据、培训评估以及直接援助的预算记录中收集了项目信息。在这种混合方法设计中,我们研究了参与计划的妇女和儿童在基线和最后一次评估之间的潜在差异。我们还利用单变量方差分析来研究母婴特征对母婴最终结果的主要影响:三个项目点共为 182 名妇女和家庭提供了项目服务。患者导航员提供直接援助、培训、目标设定以及服务协调和规划。这些家庭平均在项目中停留了 655 天,并对所获得的服务表示满意。受访者认为该计划的内容在农村环境中很容易实施。该计划有效地解决了基本需求、暴力(p 2 = 0.34 (0.05-0.53))、婴儿发育(p 2 = 0.51 (0.13-0.61))和产妇抑郁(p 2 = 0.9 (0.00-0.22))等问题。结论:利用患者指导服务的服务协调模式是一种可行的方法:在农村地区,利用患者导航员角色协调客户服务的服务协调模式以及满足婴儿和护理人员需求的方法是可行的,也是所有利益相关者所希望的。服务协调有效地影响了选定的照顾者和婴儿的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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