OveRcoming Adverse ChiLdhood Experiences (ORACLE): A Mixed Methods Intervention Co-design Study to Improve Outcomes for Children and Young People Experiencing or at Risk of Adversity.

IF 1.5
Julia R Forman, Ruth McGovern, Sophie G E Kedzior, Harriet Boulding, Simon Barrett, Cassey Muir, Nicholas Kofi Adjei, Yoko V Laurence, Tianne Haggar, Julia Fox-Rushby, David Taylor-Robinson, Eileen Kaner, Ingrid Wolfe
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Abstract

Childhood exposures to adversity are common and increase risk for negative health and social outcomes throughout the life course. There is limited evidence regarding interventions to prevent or reduce the impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), particularly for families with multiple adversities. Here we present the findings of mixed methods research to co-design a complex intervention to prevent adverse childhood experiences, and their impacts. Using established research methods, and the framework of the Medical Research Council (MRC) complex interventions development guidance, the work was conducted in four stages, shaped by stakeholder engagement and input at every stage. The first stage, Discover, was exploratory and employed evidence synthesis and quantitative (n = 11,564) and qualitative (n = 31) research methods to understand needs, experiences, and evidence gaps. The Define stage developed three intervention principles and identified intervention options, through a series of six co-design workshops with 41 participants and an academic research team workshop. The Develop and Deliver stages were undertaken through a Policy Lab (22 participants), and developed options for intervention design, before converging on a defined intervention that could be delivered and tested. Through this process, we developed a 'village-style' intervention, which functions at three levels: individual service users, operational, and system/strategy. Central to this are link or community health workers who would build relationships with family members, and act as a single point of contact. They should develop an understanding of family needs and the interaction of multiple complex adversities, and advocate for families, facilitating access to services. Crucially, they should use this understanding to work at and feed into operational and strategic levels to reshape services and enhance access for all families at risk of or experiencing adversity. Entry into the intervention through assessments at existing universal touch points, for example at routine perinatal or newborn appointments, should provide a prevention focus and follow the principles of proportionate universalism. Sensitive enquiry regarding financial stress may be a component of the assessment, in response to the findings of this work regarding the contexts created through the interaction of poverty and other adversities. The proposed intervention is designed to improve individual and family outcomes, and generate positive system-level changes. A feasibility study and evaluation will be required in future work, to assess the effects, costs and benefits. The processes and frameworks we developed and used may provide an adaptable template for future intervention co-design work.

克服不良童年经历(ORACLE):一项混合方法干预共同设计研究,以改善经历逆境或有逆境风险的儿童和青少年的结局。
童年时期遭遇逆境是常见的,并增加了在整个生命过程中产生负面健康和社会后果的风险。关于预防或减少不良童年经历(ace)影响的干预措施的证据有限,特别是对于有多重逆境的家庭。在这里,我们提出了混合方法研究的结果,共同设计一个复杂的干预措施,以防止不良的童年经历,及其影响。利用既定的研究方法和医学研究理事会(MRC)复杂干预措施发展指南的框架,工作分四个阶段进行,每个阶段都有利益攸关方的参与和投入。第一阶段,探索,是探索性的,采用证据综合和定量(n = 11564)和定性(n = 31)研究方法来了解需求、经验和证据差距。定义阶段制定了三个干预原则,并确定了干预方案,通过一系列有41名参与者的6个共同设计研讨会和一个学术研究小组研讨会。开发和交付阶段通过政策实验室(22名参与者)进行,并制定了干预设计方案,然后集中于可交付和测试的已定义干预措施。通过这个过程,我们开发了一个“村庄式”的干预,它在三个层面上发挥作用:个人服务用户、运营和系统/策略。这方面的核心是社区卫生工作者,他们将与家庭成员建立关系,并作为单一联系点。他们应了解家庭需要和多种复杂逆境的相互作用,并倡导家庭,促进获得服务。至关重要的是,他们应该利用这种认识,在业务和战略层面开展工作,重塑服务,增加所有面临风险或经历逆境的家庭获得服务的机会。通过在现有的普遍接触点(例如常规围产期或新生儿预约)进行评估进入干预措施,应提供预防重点,并遵循比例普遍原则。对经济压力的敏感调查可能是评估的一个组成部分,以回应这项工作关于通过贫困和其他逆境相互作用产生的环境的发现。建议的干预措施旨在改善个人和家庭的结果,并产生积极的系统层面的变化。在今后的工作中将需要进行可行性研究和评价,以评估其效果、成本和效益。我们开发和使用的过程和框架可以为未来的干预协同设计工作提供适应性强的模板。
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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