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Aboriginal primary health care, Early Childhood and the Nurse Family Partnership and Abecedarian programs Donna Ah Chee, CEO

Introduction

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Aboriginal primary health care, Early Childhood and the Nurse Family Partnership and Abecedarian programs Donna Ah Chee, CEO. Introduction. Central Australian Aboriginal Congress Aboriginal Health Status in the NT and early childhood development Early Childhood: the evidence base - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Introduction

Aboriginal primary health care, Early

Childhood and the Nurse Family Partnership and Abecedarian programs

Donna Ah Chee, CEO

Page 2: Introduction

Introduction

1. Central Australian Aboriginal Congress 2. Aboriginal Health Status in the NT and early

childhood development3. Early Childhood: the evidence base4. The Nurse Family Partnership Program5. The Abecedarian Educational Day care

Program and the Congress pre-school program

Page 3: Introduction

Children’s Services

Health Education & Training

CAACAC Board

CEO

Deputy CEO

Alukura

ChildcareIngkintja

Services

Social & Emotional

Heath

Lowitja

AMSANT

Remote Health

NACCHOCARHDS

DirectoratePublic Health

headspace

Page 4: Introduction
Page 5: Introduction

Congress Urban Unique Clients: Health Service Area and Visitors

Unique Congress Urban Clients

0

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

2007 2007-2008

2008 2008-2009

2009 2009-2010

2010 2010-2011

2011 2011-2012

2012 2012-2013

Year

Num

ber o

f Clie

nts

Visitors

Health Service Area

Page 6: Introduction

Congress Episodes of Health Care (all)

Congress Urban Episodes of Care

0

20000

40000

60000

80000

100000

120000

2007 2007-2008

2008 2008-2009

2009 2009-2010

2010 2010-2011

2011 2011-2012

2012 2012-2013

Number of Episodes

Year Number of Episodes

Page 7: Introduction
Page 8: Introduction

Aboriginal Health Status in the NT and Early Childhood

Page 9: Introduction
Page 10: Introduction

COAG Reform Council report. Healthcare 2011-2012: Comparing performance across Australia. May 2013

Page 11: Introduction

COAG Target 1: Life expectancy

70 7568

7465

7062

69 6773

79 83 79 83 79 8376

81 79 83

0

20

40

60

80

100

M F M F M F M F M F

NSW QLD WA NT AUS

Year

s

Indig. Non-Indig.

Life expectancy at birth, by Indigenous status, sex and selected state/territory, 2005–2007

Page 12: Introduction

COAG Target 1: Life expectancy

27

1815

8 8

0

10

20

30

Circulatorydisease

Cancer External causes Diabetes Respiratory

Perc

ent

Main causes of Indigenous mortality, NSW, Qld, WA, SA and NT, 2004-2008

Page 13: Introduction

Australian Early Development Index

Page 14: Introduction

NAPLAN Year 3 Reading

Page 15: Introduction

Early Childhood:The Evidence base

Page 16: Introduction

“Babies are born with 25 per cent of their brains developed, and there is then a rapid period of development so that by the age of 3 their brains are 80 per cent developed.”

Ref: Allen G. Early Intervention: The Next Steps. An Independent Report to Her Majesty’s Government. HM

Government, UK. Jan 2011. http://www.dwp.gov.uk/docs/early-intervention-next-steps.pdf

Page 17: Introduction

“A child’s development score at just 22 months can serve as an accurate predictor of educational outcomes at 26 years.”

Ref: Allen G. Early Intervention: The Next Steps. An Independent Report to Her Majesty’s Government. HM

Government, UK. Jan 2011. http://www.dwp.gov.uk/docs/early-intervention-next-steps.pdf

Page 18: Introduction

Evidence is clear that nutrition and experiences in the early years of a child’s life influence the infant’s brain development.

Page 19: Introduction

“In the brain, the ability to hold onto and work with information, focus thinking, filter distractions, and switch gears is like an airport having a highly effective air traffic control system to manage the arrivals and departures of

dozens of planes on multiple runways. Scientists refer to these capacities as executive function and self-regulation—a set of

skills that relies on three types of brain function: working memory, mental flexibility, and self-control. Children aren’t born with these skills—they are born with the potential to

develop them”.

Page 20: Introduction
Page 21: Introduction

Regulation needed by other

Capacity for regulation by self

Regulation needed by other

Capacity for regulation by self

Development

Healthy development Child has experiences in early life that enable development of regulation. Child becomes less dependant of external figure (ie parent) to regular emotions and is able to manage challenges without emotional breakdown or physical outburst

Unhealthy development Child does not have experiences in early life that enable self regulation in adult life. Functioning is never developed to the extend that emotions and impulses can be managed. Individuals who do not have regulation display problems in later life such as alcohol abuse, mental health problems, impulse control that require control by external systems including legislation and agencies such as police and mental health services

Page 22: Introduction
Page 23: Introduction

Major longitudinal study 2011 www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1010076108

Followed a cohort of 1000 children from birth to age 32 96% retention, Dunedin, New Zealand

Page 24: Introduction
Page 25: Introduction

The California Adverse Childhood Experiences Study

• Links between childhood maltreatment and later life health and well-being.

• 17,000 participants.• Adults who had adverse childhoods showed higher

levels of violence and antisocial behaviour, adult mental health problems, school underperformance and lower IQs, economic underperformance and poor physical health.

• The scientific rationale for Early Intervention is overwhelming

Anda RF, Felitti VJ, Walker J, Whitfield CL, Bremner JD,Perry BD, Dube SR, Giles WH (2006) The enduring effects of abuse and related adverse experiences in childhood: A convergence of evidence from neurobiology and epidemiology. European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience 256(3): 174–86.

Page 26: Introduction

Negative experiences in the early years have long-lasting effects that can be difficult to overcome later.

Ref. McCain MN, Mustard JF. Reversing the real brain drain: Early Years Study- Final Report. Ontario Children’s Secretariat 1999. pp25-26

Page 27: Introduction
Page 28: Introduction

Hart and Risley in Shenk, D, the Genius in All of Us, Doubleday, 2010

“ The differences were astounding. Children in professionals' homes were exposed to an average of more than fifteen hundred more spoken words per hour than children in welfare homes. Over one year, that amounted to a difference of nearly 8 million words, which, by age four, amounted to a total gap of 32 million words. They also found a substantial gap in tone and in the complexity of words being used “

In addition there were 560 000 more positive affirmations in the professional households compared with 150 000 more negative affirmations in the welfare households

Page 29: Introduction

Mothers’ Speech and Infant Vocabulary

Ref: Huttenlocher et al, Developmental Psychology, (1991)

Page 30: Introduction

Audible television is associated with decreased exposure to discernible human adult speech and decreased child vocalizations. These results may explain the association between infant television exposure and delayed language development.

Ref: Christaki DA et al. Audible television and decreased adult words, infant vocalizations, and conversational turns. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med.

2009;163(6):554-558.

Page 31: Introduction

“What parents do is more important than who they are. Especially in a child’s earliest years, the right kind of parenting is a bigger influence on their future than wealth, class, education or any other common social factor.”

Ref: Allen G. Early Intervention: The Next Steps. An Independent Report to Her Majesty’s Government. HM

Government, UK. Jan 2011. http://www.dwp.gov.uk/docs/early-intervention-next-steps.pdf

Page 32: Introduction

Key Initiatives For Health Improvement

Immunisation

Smoking Preventio

n/ Cessation

Home Visiting School Connectedness

Breastfeeding

Early Educational Infant Day-care

Maternal Education

Advocacy - enhance social, political, economic and physical environment; legislation (eg. seatbelts), structural changes (eg housing design)

Conception Birth 2 years 5 years 12 years 18 years

Community Development

Population Parenting Programs

Page 33: Introduction

NURSE FAMILY PARTNERSHIP’STHREE GOALS

1. Improve pregnancy outcomes

2. Improve child health and development

3. Improve parents’ economic self-sufficiency

Page 34: Introduction

TRIALS OF PROGRAM

• Low-income whites

• Semi-rural

• Low-income blacks

• Urban

• Large portion of Hispanics

• Nurse versus paraprofessional visitors

Elmira, NY1977

N = 400

Memphis, TN1987

N = 1,138

Denver, CO1994

N = 735

Page 35: Introduction

CONSISTENT RESULTS ACROSS TRIALS Improvements in women’s prenatal health

and dramatic reduction in arrests, convictions and jail

Reductions in child abuse, mortality and children’s injuries

Fewer subsequent pregnancies and greater intervals between births

Increases in fathers’ involvement Increases in employment and reductions in

welfare dependency Improvements in school outcomes Less addictions, sexual partners and a

healthier lifestyle at age 15

Page 36: Introduction

NFP at Congress• 6 nurse home visitors and 3

Aboriginal community workers• Recruitment has not been a

problem• Need to present prior to 28

weeks• 140 births per year• 70% acceptance rate higher

for first time mothers• Increasing early presentations • Reduction in smoking and

enhanced language development in children

Page 37: Introduction

The Home Visit / Domains• Mother is visited by the same Nurse Home Visitor and throughout the program

(therapeutic relationship, linked to outcomes).

• Frequency is between weekly and bi-weekly (potentially over 60 visits)

• Content of visits is prescribed (Pregnancy, Infancy and Toddler NFP guidelines)

The 6 program domains: 1. Personal Health (e.g. access to ANC, substance use, nutrition, mental health)2. Environmental Health (e.g. safety around the home)3. Life Course Development (e.g. resume schooling)4. Maternal Role (e.g. physical and emotional care of baby, parenting)5. Family and Friends (e.g. building strong net works)6. Health and Human Services (e.g. housing)

Page 38: Introduction

Congress Nurse Family Partnership

38

Page 39: Introduction

NFP: Outcomes for 213 accepted clients

39

Page 40: Introduction

40

Page 41: Introduction

Washington State Institute for Public Policy Economic Analysis

Nurse Family Partnership producedlarge return on investment:

– Implementation costs $9, 118– Benefits $26, 298 – Return on investment $17, 180

*Benefits and Costs of Prevention and Early Intervention Programs for Youth, S. Aos, et al.. Washington State Institute for Public Policy: Olympia, WA, 2004.

Page 42: Introduction

• Learning Games: Teachers daily engage in short interactive sessions (adult/child interaction games) with individual children or very small groups (e.g., 2 children).

• Conversational Reading: Teachers use a 3S strategy to read a book individually every day to every child.

• Language Priority: Teachers use a 3N strategy to surround spontaneous events with adult language.

• Enriched Caregiving: Teachers encourage children to practice skills (e.g., cooperating, listening, counting, colour recognition) during care routines.

The Abecedarian Approach

All 4 elements of the Abecedarian Approach are shared with parents through home visits and through carers in day care Centre's from 1 to 3 years

Page 43: Introduction

Abecedarian studies

Page 44: Introduction

Long-term Health Results forat risk Children with Abecedarian

• Fewer risky behaviors at age 18 (p<.05)

• Fewer symptoms of depression (p<.03) at age 21

• Healthier life styles. The odds of reporting an active lifestyle in young adulthood were 3.92 times greater compared to the control group: if there was a medicine that produced this odds ratio all children would be on it!

McCormick, et al. 2006. Pediatrics.McLaughlin. 2007. Child Development.Campbell et al., 2008. Early Childhood Research Quarterly.

Page 45: Introduction

% of children in Normal IQ Range (>84) by Age (longitudinal analysis)

Martin, Ramey, & Ramey. 1990. American Journal of Public Health

Page 46: Introduction

Stanford-Binet X Maternal Education

Ramey & Ramey. 1998. Preventive Medicine..

Page 47: Introduction

Educational Attainment:Percent College Attendance

Campbell et al., 2002. Applied Developmental Science.

At age 21, almost three times as many individuals in the treated group (39.5%) compared to the control group (13.7%) had attended, or were still attending,a 4-year university.

χ2(1, N = 104) = 6.78, p < .01

Page 48: Introduction

Post-High School Education for Teen Mothers Whose Children Were in the Abecedarian Program

Ramey et al. 2000. Applied Developmental Science

Entry 4 Years Later

8 Years Later

15 Years Later

0

20

40

60

80

100

Preschool InterventionControl

Perc

ent o

f Gro

up

Page 49: Introduction
Page 50: Introduction
Page 51: Introduction

Outcome for vulnerable children with 7 week Abecedarian pre-school intervention

Page 52: Introduction
Page 53: Introduction

Once enrolled children stay enrolled

Page 54: Introduction
Page 55: Introduction

Ref: Early Learning & Development - The first five years determine a lifetime. Children Now http://dev.childrennow.org.s78640.gridserver.com/index.php/learn/early_learning_and_development/

Page 56: Introduction

THANK

YOU