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Optimising Health in the Early Years

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Unite/Community Practitioners' and Health Visitors' Association ... A biennial analysis of serious case reviews 2003-2005. DCSF Research Report DCSF-RRO23 London ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Optimising Health in the Early Years


1
Optimising Health in the Early Years
  • The Contribution Community Practitioners make to
    Public Health
  • Maggie Fisher Professional Officer
  • Unite/Community Practitioners and Health
    Visitors Association

2
Addressing the childrens and family policy
agenda, rhetoric or reality?

3
This presentation will cover
  • Relationship development
  • The population paradox and the dangers inherent
    in targeting
  • Skill mix friend or foe?
  • Outcomes for children and families the
    contribution health visiting and school nursing
    can make

4
Building therapeutic relationships
  • The traditional model of a continuing
    personalised care by the same health visitor, who
    has built up a trusting relationship with the
    family and has detailed knowledge of them is
    often cited as the main cornerstone of primary
    care and is strongly associated with client
    satisfaction.

5
Building partnerships with others
  • The Childrens Plan (2007) and the Child Health
  • Promotion Programme (2008) place a major
  • emphasis on parenting support to include
  • Supporting strong couple relationship and stable
    positive relationships within families.
  • Supporting mothers and fathers to attuned
    parenting in particular during the first months
    of life.
  • Ensuring contact with the family routinely
    involves and supports fathers, including
    non-resident fathers and supporting the
    transition to parenthood for first time mothers
    and fathers

6
The Population Paradox
  • Prevalence of childhood behaviour disorder at ten
    years of age in different social classes

7
The Population Paradox
  • Distribution of childhood behaviour problems by
    social class (Stewart-Brown 1998)

8
Skill mix
  • Addition of other workers to health visitor teams
    community nursery nurses, staff nurses,
    clerical workers
  • Enhance or dilute?
  • Issues relating to staff nurses
  • Supervision

9
YouGov polled 2827 expectant parents or parents
(27-29 May 2008) and 2337 adults, not just
parents (11-15 July 2008).
  • When parents were asked what support should be
    more widely available to help parents who
    experience relationship pressures after the birth
    of a child, the largest category of people, 53,
    said more help from health visitors
  • When asked how helpful they thought free
    counselling sessions with professionals (e.g.
    family therapists or psychologists) would be for
    vulnerable parents bringing up 0 - 3 year old
    children, 71 of parents thought these would be
    helpful or very helpful but 80 thought more
    frequent visits from health visitors would be
    helpful or very helpful

10
YouGov Poll (2008) on health visiting continued
The Centre for Social Justice (2008) The Next
Generation
  • 72 adults were fairly confident or very
    confident that health visitors are competent and
    well trained.
  • In contrast only 28 had that perception of Sure
    Start staff, 37 of social workers and 53 of
    childcare professionals
  • And if they were concerned about being able to
    cope with being a parent, 35 of adults would
    prefer to go to a health visitor for help,
    compared with 26 preferring a GP, 3 Sure Start
    staff and 3 a social worker

11
Outcomes for children and families the
contribution of health visitors and school nurses
  • Accident prevention
  • Promoting immunisation
  • Developmental delay and disorders
  • Combating obesity and malnutrition
  • Safeguarding and the prevention of NAI

12
Outcomes for children and families the
contribution of health visitors
  • Prevention of SIDS (Back to sleep campaign)
  • Promoting attachment and the early detection of
    child mental health issues
  • The prevention and early detection of post natal
    depression

13
(No Transcript)
14
Caseload sizes
  • Over 42 of health visitors have responsibility
    for 500 children or more (CPHVA 2008)
  • 63.6 report that it is not always possible to
    deliver the core universal service
  • Size of caseload does not reflect vulnerability
    of clients (FPI, 2007)
  • Family-nurse partnership 25 families

15
CPHVA Omnibus, 2008 (n829)
  • 69.2 of health visitors are saying they no
    longer have the resources to respond to the needs
    of the most vulnerable children.
  • I in 5 health visitors believe there is a serious
    risk of a child death, as arose in the case of
    Victoria Climbe

16
Stress
  • 45 health visitors had suffered work related
    stress (highest across all occupational groups)
  • Healthcare Commission NHS Survey 2006

17
Solutions
  • Central workforce planning based on need
  • Increase in health visitor numbers
  • Skill mix based on evidence
  • Central government protection of the public
    health workforce E.g. steps taken to do this
    for school nurses and now needs to happen for
    health visitors in policy
  • Optimum size of health visitor caseload advised
    in policy

18
Ultimately
  • Evidence shows that providing a service which
    can make a difference to reducing social
    inequalities and improving the health and
    wellbeing of children and families will require
  • More health visitors
  • More appropriate skill mix
  • A new training programme based on research
    evidence not current philosophy

19
We all want to feel we are providing a quality
service to children and families
20
References
  • Acherson, D.(1998) Independent Inquiry into
    Inequalities in Health Report. TSO London
  • Adams, C. and Craig, I. (2007) Health Visitor
    cuts affecting vulnerable families. Community
    Practitioner. May 2007. Vol 80. No 5.
  • Barlow J, Kirkpatrick S, Stewart-Brown S,
    Davis H 2005, "Hard-to-reach or out-of-reach?
    Reasons why women refuse to take part in early
    intervention", Children and Society, vol. 19, pp.
    199-210.

21
References (continued)
  • Brandon, M. Beldrson, P. Warren, C. Howe, D.
    Gardner, R. Dodsworth, J. Black, J. (2008)
    Analysing child deaths and serious injury through
    child abuse and neglect what can we learn? A
    biennial analysis of serious case reviews
    2003-2005. DCSF Research Report DCSF-RRO23 London
  • Branson, C. Badger, B. and Dobbs, F. (2003).
    Patient satisfaction with skill mix in primary
    care a review of the literature. Primary Health
    Care Research Development, 4, pp 329-339.
    doi10.1191/1463423603pc162oa

22
References (continued)
  • Cowley S, Caan, W. Dowling, H. Weir, H. (2007)
    What do health visitors do? A national survey of
    activities and service.. Public Health. Journal
    of the Royal Institute of Public Health.
    doi10.1016/j.puhe.2007.03.016
  • Cowley, S. and Frost, M. (2006) The Principles of
    Health Visiting. Amicus/CPHVA
  • Centre for Social Justice (2008) Breakthrough
    Britain The Next Generation A policy report from
    the Early Years Commission Chaired by Dr Samantha
    Callan September 2008. The Centre for Social
    Justice,

23
References (continued)
  • Davis, H. Spurr, P. 1998, "Parent counselling
    an evaluation of a community child mental health
    service." Journal of Child Psychology and
    Psychiatry, vol. 39, pp. 365-376
  • Department of Health (2008) Our NHS Our Future.
    NHS Next Stage Review Leading Local Change DH
    London
  • Department of Health (2007) Facing the Future A
    review of the role of health visitors. Department
    of Health. www.dh.gov.uk/cno
  • Earls F (1994). Oppositional defiant and conduct
    disorders in Rutter M, Taylor E, and Hersov L
    (Eds). Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Modern
    Approaches, Blackwell Science, Oxford.

24
References (continued)
  • Gimson, S. (2007) Health Visitors- an endangered
    species. Family and Parenting Institute.
  • HM Government (2007) PSA Delivery Agreement 19
    Ensure better care for all. HM Treasury, HMSO
    Norwich.
  • Jack S, DiCenso A, Lohfeld L 2005, "A theory of
    maternal enagagement with public health nurses
    and family visitors", Journal of Advanced
    Nursing, vol. 49, no. 2, pp. 182-190

25
References (continued)
  • Kirkpatrick, S., Barlow, J., Stewart-Brown, S.,
    Davis, H. 2007, "Working in Partnership User
    Perceptions of Intensive Home Visiting", Child
    Abuse Review, vol. 16, pp. 32-46
  • Netmums.com (2007) Families Need Health Visitors.
    Jan 2007 http//www.netmums.com/h/n/SUPPORT/HOME/A
    LL/547//

26
References (continued)
  • Olds DL, Robinson J, OBrien R, Luckey DW,
    Pettitt LM, et al. (2002) Home visiting by
    paraprofessionals and by nurses a randomized,
    controlled trial. Pediatrics 110 48696
  • Rose, G. (1993) The Strategy of Preventative
    Medicine. Oxford University Press. Oxford.
  • Unite/CPHVA (2007) Community Practitioners and
    Health Visitors Association response to Facing
    the Future-A review of the role of health
    visitors October 2007. Unite/CPHVA

27
References (continued)
  • Social Justice Policy Group (2006) Breakdown
    Britain Interim report on the state of the
    nation London Centre for Social Justice
  • Social Justice Policy Group (2007) Breakthrough
    Britain Ending the costs of social breakdown
    London Centre for Social Justice
  • Woodruffe et al 1993 in Stewart-Brown 1998
    Stewart-Brown S (1998) Public health implications
    of childhood behaviour problems and parenting
    programmes in Parenting, Schooling and Childrens
    Behaviour Hudson B, Buchanan A (Eds.) Ashgate
    Publishing Ltd, Aldershott Hants
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