Michigan and Nurse Family Partnership Implementing an Evidence-Based Preventive Intervention for Families
Why We Did It To impact the health disparity of African American families in Michigan. To replicate Nurse-Family Partnership, an evidence-based program with proven outcomes for families.
Nurse-Family Partnership Outcomes: 1. Improve health during pregnancy & improve birth outcomes 2. Improve child health and development 3. Improve families’ economic self- sufficiency
NFP Model Elements Serve low-income, first time mothers Early enrollment of pregnant women Implement program with nurses, prefer BSN Utilize visit guidelines that focus on personal health, caregiving skills and life course development Duration of program is 2.5 years
Nurse-Family Partnership Provides Professional Development for nurses Web-Based Clinical Information System Program Evaluation State Reports Continued support to refine implementation Prepare for NFP growth overtime
Michigan and Nurse-Family Partnership Department of Community Health and NFP partners together: Community and organizational planning Site Selection Nurse training and consultation Evaluation and reporting program data Program advocacy, visibility and support
Creative Funding Partnerships Three way partnership: The Michigan Department of Community Health Department of Education Department of Human Services and Nurse- Family Partnership Michigan Department of Community Health initially funds program Graduated local contribution of 10%, 20% 25% over the first 3-year cycle
State of Michigan Funding State Nurse Consultant.5 FTE State Infant Mental Health Specialist.5 FTE Sites funded in 4 communities Detroit Benton Harbor Pontiac Grand Rapids. 5 Supervisor.5 Data Entry 4 nurses serve 100 families
Community Support in Detroit NFP Steering Committee Skillman Foundation Wayne County Department of Human Services Wayne State University College of Nursing Infant Morality Project Detroit Public Schools Southwest Counseling and Development Services Several health plans County Commissioner Community resident Office of School Social Work Services
What We Found Gestational age at program enrollment: n = 572 Michigan clients 47% enrolled before 16 weeks 53% enrolled between 17 – 28 weeks 4% enrolled at 29 weeks or later
Mothers’ Health Problems Identified at entry into the program: Asthma = 17% NFP National Data Asthma = 14% Urinary Tract Infections = 7% Underweight before pregnancy = 6% High Blood Pressure = 6% Heart Problem = 5% Mental Disorder = 5%
History of Domestic and/or Family Violence Self report at intake: History of physical or emotional abuse = 26% Physical abuse in past year = 16% Physical abuse during pregnancy = 8% Forced sex in past year = 3% Afraid or partner/someone else = 5%
Premature Infants All NFP Births 339 African American Infants: NFP Michigan (222) = 10.4% Michigan African American = 16.5% Detroit African American = 15.6% Michigan & Detroit Residents
Low Birth Weight Infants African American Population: NFP Michigan (226) = 11.9% 29% of low birth weight infants were lbs Michigan African American =14.2% Detroit African American = 14.5% Michigan & Detroit Residents
Successes Early gestational age enrollment Accessing care early Utilizing community services 6.1% decrease in preterm births 2.3% decrease in low birth weight infants
Barriers & Challenges Establishing a new program Establishing referral system Recruitment and retention of nurses suited for long-term and intensive services for vulnerable families Adequate community support and advocacy Sustainability of program
What We Think About What We Found Improved pregnancy and child health outcomes Early access to care and services Increased clinical skills for nurses Creative partnerships & funding Improved local community collaboration and support
Take Home Message Improve pregnancy and child health outcomes with evidence based NFP Support sites to develop best practices Renew community partnerships Be creative with current funding sources
NFP Supervisor Quote “It’s an evolution, the development comes over time. Once we got the word out to the community and nurses began to learn how to deliver the NFP the momentum has been enormous – and now its pure love for the program and the relationships with clients.”