Keywords

child development, family resilience, home visitation, outcome assessment, program evaluation, preventive intervention

 

Authors

  1. de la Rosa, Ivan A. PhD, LMSW
  2. Perry, Joanne PhD, LISW
  3. Johnson, Victoria MA, LPCC

Abstract

This study examined outcome measures of a home-visitation program that provided services to first-born children and their parents. Home-visitation workers conducted pretest-posttest assessments for prenatal and postpartum periods for 109 families. Families were assessed using the Revised North Carolina Family Assessment Scale. Paired sample t tests were used to assess effect. Ordinary least squares regression measured effect of increased home-visitation services on family well-being. In this study, program participants displayed significantly higher posttest scores on social support, caregiver characteristics, family interaction measures, and a reduction in personal problems affecting parenting. Improved scores were significantly related to increased numbers of home-visitation services. The results are promising as participants were observed to make positive improvements in family resiliency.