2010-2019 年英格兰家庭护士伙伴关系对未成年母亲的强化家访:使用倾向得分匹配的基于人口的数据链接队列研究

F. Cavallaro, Ruth Gilbert, J. van der Meulen, Sally Kendall, Eilis Kennedy, Katie L. Harron
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摘要

我们利用卫生部门(医院事件统计)、教育部门和儿童社会关怀部门(全国学生数据库)的行政数据,建立了一个包含 13 万多名年龄在 13-19 岁之间、在 2010 年 4 月至 2019 年 3 月期间活产的母亲的关联队列。利用倾向得分匹配法,我们比较了参加或未参加 FNP 的母亲的儿童虐待指标、健康和发育结果,以及产妇在出生后 7 年内的医院使用情况和教育结果。我们没有发现 FNP 与儿童虐待指标之间存在关联的证据,但 FNP 母亲所生儿童在 2 岁前因虐待/伤害相关诊断而意外入院的比例有所增加(6.6% vs 5.7%,相对风险 (RR) 1.15;95% CI 1.07,1.24)。有微弱证据表明,FNP 母亲所生子女更有可能在 5 岁时达到良好的发育水平(57.5% vs 55.4%,RR 1.05;95% CI 1.00,1.09)。我们的研究证实了之前对 FNP 的评估结果,即没有证据表明 FNP 对儿童虐待或行政数据测量的健康结果有益。适应症的偏差以及干预和常规护理的差异可能限制了我们检测效果的能力。未来的评估应收集更多有关产妇风险因素和与产妇/儿童福祉相关的其他结果的信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Intensive home visiting for adolescent mothers in the Family Nurse Partnership in England 2010–2019: a population-based data linkage cohort study using propensity score matching
We evaluated the effectiveness of the Family Nurse Partnership (FNP), an intensive home visiting programme aiming to improve birth outcomes, child health and development, and to promote economic self-sufficiency among teenage mothers.We created a linked cohort of >130 000 mothers aged 13–19 years with live births between April 2010 and March 2019, using administrative data from health (Hospital Episode Statistics), education and children’s social care (National Pupil Database). Using propensity score matching, we compared indicators of child maltreatment, health and development outcomes, and maternal hospital utilisation and educational outcomes up to 7 years following birth for mothers who did or did not enrol in FNP.We found no evidence of an association between FNP and indicators of child maltreatment, except for an increased rate of unplanned admissions for maltreatment/injury-related diagnoses up to age 2 years for children born to FNP mothers (6.6% vs 5.7%, relative risk (RR) 1.15; 95% CI 1.07, 1.24). There was weak evidence that children born to FNP mothers were more likely to achieve a good level of development at age 5 years (57.5% vs 55.4%, RR 1.05; 95% CI 1.00, 1.09). FNP mothers were less likely to have a subsequent delivery within 18 months of the index birth (8.4% vs 9.3%, RR 0.92; 95% CI 0.88, 0.97).Our study supports findings from previous evaluations of FNP showing no evidence of benefit for child maltreatment or health outcomes measured in administrative data. Bias by indication, and variation in the intervention and usual care, may have limited our ability to detect effects. Future evaluations should capture more information on maternal risk factors and additional outcomes relating to maternal/child well-being.
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