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Children in Wales Annual Conference 2018.

                                                                                                                                     The Whole Child:  The importance of getting it right






















                     Interventions that enhance health services for parents and infants



                   to improve child development and social and emotional wellbeing in


                                                       high-income countries: A systematic review









            Background




            Experiences in the first 1000 days of life have a critical

            influence on child development. Appropriate early child

            development (including physical, social and emotional,
            language and cognitive development) has consistently

            been shown to be associated with good health and

            educational outcomes in childhood, and better health
            and employment outcomes in adulthood. Universal

            health services that support families need evidence to

            improve their provision.




            What we did




            We reviewed studies that tested interventions aiming
            to improve child development including social and

            emotional wellbeing outcomes, by enhancing health

            service contact with parents up to 24 months
            postpartum. We used a broad systematic search of the

            extensive literature in this field, and searched many

            sources in addition to database searches (such as 58
            programme or organisation websites).




            What we found




            We found 22 studies in high-income settings. The

            quality of the studies was moderate to low, and there

            was only limited evidence that the interventions had
            any positive effects. Programmes of greater intensity (in

            terms of length, number or type of components) did not

            show more positive effects than programmes of lower
            intensity.








                      How can our research help you





                      Understanding how health service contacts can be enhanced to provide support for parents -to achieve the

                      best outcomes for their children - is necessary but challenging. Maternal and child health services consist

                      of many components, many of these untested. Funding is also scarce. We found insufficient evidence that

                      universal interventions currently available improve child development outcomes, especially when compared

                      to usual care. There is an urgent need for robust evaluation of existing and novel interventions, to enhance

                      services for all families.  If you’d like to know more, or if you’re interested in doing your own research in this

                      area and think we can help, please contact Lisa Hurt at Cardiff University (hurtl@cardiff.ac.uk).












                                                                                                                                                NCPHWR is funded by





            The National Centre for Population Health & Wellbeing Research


            www.ncphwr.org.uk
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