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BC Healthy Connections Project (BCHCP)

S

Simon Fraser University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Effectiveness of Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP) in BC

Treatments

Behavioral: Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP)
Behavioral: Existing services

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01672060
2010s0569

Details and patient eligibility

About

Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP) is a primary prevention program that was developed by Dr. David Olds in the United States (US) with the goal of helping vulnerable young first-time mothers and their children. The program involves public health nurses (PHNs) visiting mothers in their homes, providing intensive supports starting in pregnancy and continuing until children reach their second birthday. Studies in the US have shown that NFP significantly reduces child maltreatment and child behaviour problems, while also improving children's early learning and mother's economic self-sufficiency. Economic studies have also shown that the program pays for itself over the long-term. However, NFP has never been tested in Canada. Due to major differences in our populations and in our public services, we do not know whether NFP will show the same benefits here. We therefore plan to conduct a scientific evaluation of NFP's effectiveness in British Columbia (BC), in close collaboration with the BC government and BC's Health Authorities. Using randomized-controlled trial methods, NFP's effectiveness will be specifically evaluated in comparison with existing perinatal services in BC regarding outcomes across three fundamental domains: 1) pregnancy and birth; 2) child health and development; and 3) maternal health and life course. Findings from this evaluation will be used to improve the NFP program - to better meet the needs of vulnerable young mothers and their children in BC.

Enrollment

739 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

Under 24 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Aged 24 years or under
  2. First Birth
  3. Less than 27 weeks gestation
  4. Competent to provide informed consent, including conversational competence in English
  5. Experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage (must meet 5a or 5b):

5a. Aged 19 years or younger (eligible) 5b. Aged 20-24 (eligible if has TWO of the following):

  • 5.1. Lone parent (is not married or living common-law, i.e., not living with the same person for more than one year)
  • 5.2. Less than grade 12 (does not have BC's Dogwood certificate, General Education Development [GED] Credential or other diploma equivalent to grade 12; note that the Evergreen Certificate is not equivalent to grade 12)
  • 5.3. Low income (based on answering "yes" to any ONE of the following)
  • 5.3a. Do you receive income assistance (e.g., disability, social assistance, employment insurance, or BC Medical Services Plan Premium Assistance)?
  • 5.3b. Do you find it very difficult to live on your total household income, particularly regarding food and rent?
  • 5.3c. Do you live in a group home, shelter, or institutional facility (e.g., treatment center)?

Exclusion criteria

  1. Planning to have the child adopted
  2. Planning to leave the NFP catchment area (for three months or longer)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

739 participants in 2 patient groups

Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP)
Experimental group
Treatment:
Behavioral: Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP)
Existing services
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Behavioral: Existing services

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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