Pregnancy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Mother and Infant Home Visiting Program Evaluation (MIHOPE) - Strong Start
Adverse birth outcomes result in significant emotional and economic costs for families and
communities. Research suggests that poor birth outcomes are influenced by a variety of
social, psychological, behavioral, environmental, and biological factors. Home visiting
programs represent a promising means of impacting each of these areas.
The Mother and Infant Home Visiting Program Evaluation - Strong Start (MIHOPE-Strong Start)
will evaluate the effectiveness of two evidence-based home visiting models at improving birth
outcomes for women who are enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP. The two models to be studied -
Healthy Families America (HFA) and Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP) - have both shown some
evidence of improving birth outcomes in prior research.
The overall goals of the study are to determine whether home visiting programs improve birth
outcomes and reduce health care costs in the child's first year. In addition, the evaluation
is designed to investigate the features of local programs and of home visitation that lead to
greater effects on birth outcomes and health care costs. The study includes an impact
analysis to measure what difference home visiting programs make on maternal prenatal health
and health care use, preterm birth and other birth outcomes, and infant health and health
care use. It also includes an implementation analysis that will describe the families who
participate and examine how the program models operate in their local and state contexts. The
primary data used in the study are expected to be from surveys completed by families and home
visiting staff, Medicaid and CHIP data, vital records, and program service records. Among
families who are eligible for the study, random assignment will be used to select families
for enrollment in home visiting services. Those selected for home visiting services will form
the program group, and those not selected will form a comparison group. The research team
will monitor both groups over time to see if differences emerge in the outcome areas
mentioned above. Although the study will affect which families can enroll in home visiting
services, no fewer families will be served as a result of the study.
The study's conceptual framework has three broad aspects: (1) inputs (factors influencing
service delivery), (2) outputs (services delivered) and (3) outcomes for families. Each site
in MIHOPE-Strong Start will use either the NFP or HFA home visiting model.
Community resources provide a foundation from which programs operate and are considered an
input that influence how services are provided to families. In particular, these determine
the outside referral services available to home visiting programs and the opportunities
available to families in both the program and control groups. By connecting pregnant women
with services, home visiting programs can change mothers' health care use, health behaviors,
and health status, which in turn can lead to improvements in birth outcomes. In communities
where services are limited, however, home visiting programs may have limited capacity to
improve mothers' connections to such supports. Furthermore, a program's ability to improve
outcomes is influenced by the "treatment differential," or the difference between service
receipt among families who receive home visiting and families who do not receive home
visiting. The more that control group members receive services that are similar to those
provided by HFA and NFP, the smaller the "treatment differential." Community context also
includes community characteristics that could affect norms toward use of social services and
health care, or other influences on control group help-seeking and program group responses to
home visiting programs. These contextual factors can affect program impacts in both positive
and negative directions. The service model defines the program plan. It includes information
such as the intended goals of the home visiting program; the expected frequency, duration,
and content of home visits; and intended linkages with other services.
The MIHOPE-Strong Start implementation study will document the extent to which the two
evidence-based models and their local counterparts have defined clear, coherent, and
well-specified service plans for helping parents to obtain prenatal care, other services
needed to reduce the risk of poor birth outcomes, and infant health care in the first year of
life - a critical prerequisite to delivering services that could affect these outcomes.
In MIHOPE-Strong Start, the "service model" can be defined at two levels: the service model
is defined by the national evidence-based model and then it may be refined or adapted by the
agency that is operating a local program. It is important to clearly understand how HFA and
NFP define their models since these models showed efficacy in prior research. At the same
time, local programs often deliberately adapt models to fit their local contexts. Given
inconsistent impacts on birth outcomes in past studies, in fact, such adaptations could be
one path to improvements in program impacts.
There are multiple organizational influences on how a home visiting program defines its
service model and its implementation system. These organizations include the local program
operator, the purveyor of the evidence-based model that has been adopted (HFA or NFP), the
state MIECHV (Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program) grantee (if the
site is participating in MIECHV), and community organizations with which the local agency
collaborates.
The implementation system includes the resources for carrying out the service model. It
incorporates policies and procedures for staff recruitment, training, supervision and
evaluation; assessment tools, protocols and curricula to guide service delivery;
administrative supports; organizational climate regarding fidelity and the use of
evidence-based practices; available consultation to address issues beyond the home visitor's
skills and expertise; and the program's relationships with other organizations to facilitate
referral and service coordination.
Other program characteristics that affect the services delivered include the attributes of
staff in a given program. NFP specifies that home visitors should be registered nurses with a
minimum of a baccalaureate degree in nursing. HFA gives local sites considerable discretion
in this regard. Moreover, an individual staff person's own psychological well-being can
influence how they approach their work with families. In addition to these global attributes,
staff may vary in their degree of focus, confidence, and competence in carrying out
responsibilities with respect to particular outcomes, due to variations in staff training and
supervision. The implementation study will therefore be designed to understand the extent to
which not only the service model, but also the implementation system and individual staff,
are focused on activities that are expected to improve birth outcomes and maternal and infant
health care use.
The attributes of families who enroll in a given home visiting program will also affect the
program's opportunities to affect birth outcomes. HFA and NFP specify the characteristics of
families that their programs can serve, yet even within each national model, local programs
sometimes vary in the families they target either because of community characteristics, or
because they vary in their processes for family recruitment. Baseline attributes of families
who enroll can, in turn, influence services because staff are expected to tailor services to
the family's strengths, needs, and concerns; because families vary in their understanding of
the program and the benefits they are likely to derive from it; and because parents vary in
their capacity, whether psychosocial or because of material resources, to engage with the
services offered.
These inputs - the service model, implementation system, and characteristics of home visitors
and families - all affect the outputs, or the services that families receive. Because home
visiting programs rely heavily on referrals to other community organizations to meet
families' needs, these outputs can include services provided directly by home visiting staff
and referrals to other services.
NFP and HFA programs are designed to affect mothers' prenatal outcomes, including use of
recommended levels of prenatal care, prenatal health behaviors related to birth outcomes such
as smoking and use of alcohol or other substances, and mothers' prenatal health. These
prenatal outcomes may influence birth outcomes, and birth outcomes may directly affect infant
health outcomes, health care use and costs. By improving birth outcomes, parenting behaviors
may also improve. Furthermore, home visiting services may indirectly improve infant health
and health care use regardless of impacts on birth outcomes by improving parenting behaviors.
Based on this framework, MIHOPE-Strong Start will address the following broad research
questions:
- What is the impact of home visiting programs that use one of these two evidence-based
models on birth outcomes, maternal and infant health, and health care use up to the
first year postpartum? How do impacts vary for key subgroups, such as smokers and young
mothers?
- What is the impact of programs using each evidence-based model on the outcomes of MIHOPE
Strong Start? The design is also intended to provide information that would allow
actuaries at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to estimate the
effects of the programs on Medicaid costs.
The implementation study for MIHOPE-Strong Start will document the key features of HFA's and
NFP's service models and implementation systems (at the national and local levels) that are
expected to affect birth and health outcomes. The implementation research will answer these
specific questions:
- How is each evidence-based service model — HFA and NFP — defined?
- How do local home visiting programs specify or adapt their service models relative to
the national models with which they are affiliated?
- To what extent are local service models and implementation systems focused on preterm
birth and related outcomes?
- What dosage of services do families actually receive in local programs and how much does
it differ from the intended dosage?
- What kinds of referrals are provided to community services that could affect birth
outcomes and the child's and mother's health?
- How do programs' inputs (such as the two evidence-based models, the extent of focus on
birth outcomes, family characteristics, staff attributes, and community characteristics)
relate to achieved outputs (in particular, the dosage of services received and referrals
provided)?
Finally, the study will examine the intersection of impacts and implementation to answer the
research question:
- How do home visiting programs using these two evidence-based models achieve their results?
To provide unbiased estimates of the effects of home visiting programs, families who are
recruited into the study will be randomly assigned either to a program group that can receive
home visiting services or to a control group that can use other services available in the
community. Although the feasibility of carrying out random assignment must be assessed
community-by-community, discussions with states and local programs thus far indicate that the
need for home visiting services far exceeds the capacity of local programs in most places,
allowing for the ethical creation of a control group. Other than home visiting services from
the programs participating in MIHOPE-Strong Start, control group members can receive services
available in the community for which they would normally be eligible. Control group members
will receive referrals to such services. After their child reaches one year of age, those
assigned to the control group will be able to receive home visiting services, if they are
eligible for the local program. The evaluation will adhere to all ethical standards for
program evaluation and has undergone human subjects review by the MDRC Institutional Review
Board.
An impact analysis will estimate the effects of home visiting on prenatal health care use,
birth outcomes, infant health, and maternal and infant health care use until the infant is
one year old. The analysis will start with an analysis for the full sample, by evidence-based
model (HFA and NFP), and for key subgroups. In all three cases, results will be presented for
an "intent-to-treat" analysis that compares all program group members—regardless of whether
they actually received home visiting services—with all control group members, some of whom
may have received home visiting outside the MIECHV program. State Medicaid and vital records
data will be collected from each of the 18 states and will provide all follow-up data, as
well as some baseline data about sample members.
An implementation study, designed to complement the impact study, will collect information on
community context, influential organizations, the service model, the implementation system,
home visitors, families, and actual service delivery. The proposed evaluation will rely on
multiple sources of data to understand how home visiting programs are implemented and what
factors affect the quality of implementation. These data include information from each
model's management information systems, interviews with home visitors and program managers at
local sites, interviews with state administrators, and community characteristic information
from the U.S. Census. Collecting basic implementation data across such a large number of
sites will enable MIHOPE-Strong Start to provide evidence about which program variations are
most effective at improving birth outcomes and maternal and infant health care use. It will
also provide information about how programs can be designed to best improve these outcomes in
the future.
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