Parents' comprehensive health literacy and child health after attending extended home visiting in Swedish multicultural settings-A case-comparison study.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-05 DOI:10.1111/scs.13292
Kirsi Tiitinen Mekhail, Bo Burström, Anneli Marttila, Josefin Wångdahl, Lene Lindberg
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Abstract

Background: Parents' low health literacy (HL) has negative impacts on child health. Parental interventions may improve parents' HL and thus impact child health positively.

Objectives: This study aimed to gain knowledge about associations between parents' comprehensive HL (CHL) and child health after an extended postnatal home visiting program in Swedish multicultural, disadvantaged settings compared to parents receiving regular child healthcare (CHC).

Materials and methods: This quasi-experimental study used a case-control sampling method to recruit first-time parents through two CHC centres in Stockholm (2017-2020). Participants (N = 151) were interviewed twice through structured questionnaires when their child was <2 months and 15-18 months old. HLS-EU-Q16 assessed parents' CHL. Children's medical records (0-18 months) were reviewed regarding breastfeeding, children's exposure to smoking, language development and healthcare utilisation. Data were analysed with regression models and non-parametric tests.

Results: No significant association was found between parents' CHL and child health. However, significantly fewer unplanned visits to the CHC centre were observed among children (0-18 months) in the intervention group irrespective of CHL, compared with children to parents with improved CHL in the comparison group (F = 3.856, p = 0.011).

Conclusions: Postnatal home visiting interventions practicing proportional universalism and family-centred care may reduce unplanned visits within CHC in disadvantaged settings despite parents' CHL. Further studies with long-term follow-up are suggested to explore associations between parents' CHL and child health.

Trial registration: As a clinical study (not a clinical trial) with appropriate ethical permission with participants' consents, this study was retrospectively registered (18 February 2020) in the ISRCTN registry (ISRCTN10336603).

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瑞典多元文化背景下父母参加扩展家访后的综合健康素养与儿童健康--案例比较研究。
背景:父母健康素养低(HL)会对儿童健康产生负面影响。家长干预措施可提高家长的健康素养,从而对儿童健康产生积极影响:本研究旨在了解在瑞典多元文化和弱势环境中,与接受常规儿童保健(CHC)的父母相比,产后家访项目延长后父母的综合健康素养(CHL)与儿童健康之间的关系:这项准实验研究采用病例对照抽样法,通过斯德哥尔摩的两家儿童保健中心招募首次为人父母者(2017-2020年)。参与者(N = 151)在其子女取得成绩时通过结构化问卷接受了两次访谈:未发现父母的 CHL 与儿童健康之间存在明显关联。然而,与比较组中父母健康状况有所改善的儿童相比(F = 3.856, p = 0.011),干预组中的儿童(0-18 个月),无论其健康状况如何,前往儿童健康中心的计划外就诊次数明显减少:产后家访干预措施实行比例普遍主义和以家庭为中心的护理,可减少弱势环境中儿童保健中心的计划外探访,尽管父母的 CHL 有所改善。建议进一步开展长期随访研究,探讨父母的CHL与儿童健康之间的关系:作为一项临床研究(非临床试验),在获得适当的伦理许可和参与者同意的情况下,本研究已在ISRCTN登记处(ISRCTN10336603)进行了回顾性登记(2020年2月18日)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
5.30%
发文量
71
期刊介绍: Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences is an established quarterly, peer reviewed Journal with an outstanding international reputation. As the official publication of the Nordic College of Caring Science, the Journal shares their mission to contribute to the development and advancement of scientific knowledge on caring related to health, well-being, illness and the alleviation of human suffering. The emphasis is on research that has a patient, family and community focus and which promotes an interdisciplinary team approach. Of special interest are scholarly articles addressing and initiating dialogue on theoretical, empirical and methodological concerns related to critical issues. All articles are expected to demonstrate respect for human dignity and accountability to society. In addition to original research the Journal also publishes reviews, meta-syntheses and meta-analyses.
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