(Press-News.org) Intensive parenting and health education provided in homes of pregnant American Indian teens reduced the mothers' illegal drug use, depression and behavior problems, and set their young children on track to meet behavioral and emotional milestones they may have otherwise missed.
The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health-led research also suggests that employing local community health educators instead of more formally educated nurses to counsel young at-risk mothers could be cost effective and provide badly needed jobs to high school graduates from the same impoverished communities. While the study was conducted in four American Indian communities in the Southwest, the researchers note that its success could likely be replicated in other low-income populations around the United States.
A report on the findings is published online Oct. 10 in the American Journal of Psychiatry.
"For years in public health we have been working on immunizations and other medical interventions to set the course for the health of disadvantaged children, and we have turned the tide," says the study's lead author Allison Barlow, MPH, PhD, associate director of the Center for American Indian Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. "Now the burden is in multi-generational behavioral health problems, the substance abuse, depression and domestic violence that are transferred from parents to children. This intervention can help us break that cycle of despair."
American Indian adolescents have the highest rates of teen pregnancy, substance use, suicide and dropping out of high school of any racial or ethnic group in the country.
For the study, 322 expectant American Indian teens were randomly assigned to receive optimized standard care – transportation to prenatal and well-baby clinic visits, pamphlets about childcare and other resources and referrals to local services – or optimized standard care plus a program of 63 in-home education sessions, known as Family Spirit. In the Family Spirit intervention, visits occurred weekly through the last trimester of pregnancy, biweekly until four months after the baby's birth, monthly from months four through twelve and then bimonthly until the child turned three.
The lessons covered everything from the benefits of breastfeeding and reading to your child to creating sleep and feeding schedules, as well as life skills such as budgeting, conflict resolution and preventing substance use.
Prior to beginning the study, the teens had high rates of substance use in their lifetime (more than 84 percent), depressive symptoms (more than 32 percent), high school dropout (more than 57 percent) and residential instability (51 percent moved more than twice in a year).
The researchers found that mothers in the Family Spirit group were less likely to use illegal drugs, be depressed or experience behavior problems than those in the control group. They also found that the children in the Family Spirit group were less likely to show early behaviors known to signal future conduct problems, anxiety and depression. The children were easier to soothe, had better sleeping and eating patterns and were more likely to meet emotional and behavioral milestones than those in the control group. The study followed the mothers and children until the children were three years old.
"We found a consistent pattern of success across a number of different outcome measures," says the study's principal investigator John Walkup, MD, an adjunct professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and a faculty member within the Center for American Indian Health. "These early years are critical ones for children. We teach these mothers not only how to be competent parents, but how to cope with stressors and other risk factors that could impede positive parenting skills."
Barlow adds: "A key to the program's success is utilizing workers from the local community. We can grow the workforce in some of the poorest communities in the nation, where good jobs can be hard to come by. With focused training, people with little formal education but important life experiences and a passion to serve their communities can become change agents to overcome these very tough problems."
The Affordable Care Act set aside $1.5 billion in funding for states to implement evidence-based home-visiting programs to support the health and development of at-risk children, with three percent earmarked for tribal communities. Barlow says many existing programs have not been evaluated in low-resource populations such as American Indians, new immigrants and military families and that other programs have not shown reduction in both maternal drug use and mental health problems.
Family Spirit was recently approved by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as an evidence-based program, now eligible for the federal dollars, Barlow says.
INFORMATION:
"Paraprofessional-Delivered Home-Visiting Intervention from American Indian Teen Mothers and Children: 3-Year Outcomes From a Randomized Controlled Trial" was written by Allison Barlow, MPH, PhD; Brita Mullany, PhD, MHS; Nicole Neault, MPH; Novalene Gokish, BS; Trudy Billy, BS; Ranelda Hastings, BS; Sherilynn Lorenzo; Crystal Kee, BS; Kristin Lake, MPH; Cleve Redmond, PhD; Alice Carter, PhD; and John T. Walkup, MD.
The study was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health's National Institute on Drug Abuse (R01 019042).
Walkup has received free drug and/or placebo from the following pharmaceuticals for National Institutes of Mental Health-funded studies: Eli Lilly (2003), Pfizer (2007) and Abbott (2005). He was paid for a one-time consultation with Shire (2011); he is a paid speaker for the Tourette Syndrome Association-Centers for Disease Control and Prevention outreach educational programs. He receives grant funding from the Hartwell Foundation and the Tourette Syndrome Association. He receives royalties for books on Tourette Syndrome from Guilford Press and Oxford Press.
In-home visits reduce drug use, depression in pregnant teens
Successful intervention in American Indian communities could be used widely in low-income groups across the country, researchers say
2014-10-10
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Bowel cancer risk reduced by adopting multiple healthy behaviors
2014-10-10
Adoption of a combination of five key healthy behaviors is associated with a reduction in the risk of developing bowel cancer. Researchers from the German Institute of Human Nutrition Potsdam-Rehbruecke quantified the impact of combined multiple healthy lifestyle behaviors on the risk of developing bowel cancer, and found that this impact is stronger in men than in women.
Lead author, Krasimira Aleksandrova, says: "These data provide additional incentive to individuals, medical professionals and public health authorities to invest in healthy lifestyle initiatives. Each ...
The Lancet Global Health: Widely used sanitation programmes do not necessarily improve health
2014-10-10
The sanitation intervention delivered under the terms of the Government of India's Total Sanitation Campaign—the world's largest sanitation initiative—provided almost 25 000 individuals in rural India with access to a latrine. However, it did not reduce exposure to faecal pathogens or decrease the occurrence of diarrhoea, parasitic worm infections, or child malnutrition.
"The programme is effective in building latrines, but not all households participate"*, explains lead author Professor Thomas Clasen from Emory University, Atlanta, USA and the London School ...
Recent kidney policy changes have not created racial disparities in care
2014-10-10
Washington, DC (October 9, 2014) — Recent policy and guideline changes related to the care of patients with kidney failure have not created racial disparities, according to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN). Such studies are needed to ensure that all patients continue to receive the highest quality of care after such changes are implemented.
In 2011, the End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System went into effect, which changed the way dialysis facilities were paid for care related to kidney ...
Electrically conductive plastics promising for batteries, solar cells
2014-10-10
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – An emerging class of electrically conductive plastics called "radical polymers" may bring low-cost, transparent solar cells, flexible and lightweight batteries and ultrathin antistatic coatings for consumer electronics and aircraft.
Researchers have established the solid-state electrical properties of one such polymer, called PTMA, which is about 10 times more electrically conductive than common semiconducting polymers.
"It's a polymer glass that conducts charge, which seems like a contradiction because glasses are usually insulators," said ...
Migrating animals' pee affects ocean chemistry
2014-10-09
The largest migration on the planet is the movement of small animals from the surface of the open ocean, where they feed on plants under cover of darkness, to the sunless depths where they hide from predators during the day.
University of Washington researchers have found that this regular migration helps shape our oceans. During the daylight hours below the surface the animals release ammonia, the equivalent of our urine, that turns out to play a significant role in marine chemistry, particularly in low-oxygen zones. Results are published online this week in the Proceedings ...
Penn Medicine's 'sepsis sniffer' generates faster sepsis care and suggests reduced mortality
2014-10-09
PHILADELPHIA - An automated early warning and response system for sepsis developed by Penn Medicine experts has resulted in a marked increase in sepsis identification and care, transfer to the ICU, and an indication of fewer deaths due to sepsis. A study assessing the tool is published online in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.
Sepsis is a potentially life-threatening complication of an infection; it can severely impair the body's organs, causing them to fail. There are as many as three million cases of severe sepsis and 750,000 resulting deaths in the United States ...
Manipulating memory with light
2014-10-09
Just look into the light: not quite, but researchers at the UC Davis Center for Neuroscience and Department of Psychology have used light to erase specific memories in mice, and proved a basic theory of how different parts of the brain work together to retrieve episodic memories.
Optogenetics, pioneered by Karl Diesseroth at Stanford University, is a new technique for manipulating and studying nerve cells using light. The techniques of optogenetics are rapidly becoming the standard method for investigating brain function.
Kazumasa Tanaka, Brian Wiltgen and colleagues ...
Space-based methane maps find largest US signal in Southwest
2014-10-09
ANN ARBOR—An unexpectedly high amount of the climate-changing gas methane, the main component of natural gas, is escaping from the Four Corners region in the U.S. Southwest, according to a new study by the University of Michigan and NASA.
The researchers mapped satellite data to uncover the nation's largest methane signal seen from space. They measured levels of the gas emitted from all sources, and found more than half a teragram per year coming from the area where Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah meet. That's about as much methane as the entire coal, oil, ...
Plant communities in Holy Land can cope with climate change of 'biblical' dimensions
2014-10-09
An international research team comprised of German, Israeli and American ecologists, including Dr. Claus Holzapfel, Dept. of Biological Sciences, Rutgers University-Newark, has conducted unique long-term experiments in Israel to test predictions of climate change, and has concluded that plant communities in the Holy Land can cope with climate change of "biblical" dimensions. Their findings appear in the current issue of Nature Communications at http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/141006/ncomms6102/pdf/ncomms6102.pdf.
When taking global climate change into account, many ...
NASA's Hubble maps the temperature and water vapor on an extreme exoplanet
2014-10-09
A team of scientists using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has made the most detailed global map yet of the glow from a turbulent planet outside our solar system, revealing its secrets of air temperatures and water vapor.
Hubble observations show the exoplanet, called WASP-43b, is no place to call home. It is a world of extremes, where seething winds howl at the speed of sound from a 3,000-degree-Fahrenheit "day" side, hot enough to melt steel, to a pitch-black "night" side with plunging temperatures below 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Astronomers have mapped the temperatures ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Early diagnosis of bladder cancer, now conveniently at home
People who are autistic and transgender/gender diverse have poorer health and health care
Gene classifier tests for prostate cancer may influence treatment decisions despite lack of evidence for long-term outcomes
KERI, overcomes the biggest challenge of the lithium–sulfur battery, the core of UAM
In chimpanzees, peeing is contagious
Scientists uncover structure of critical component in deadly Nipah virus
Study identifies benefits, risks linked to popular weight-loss drugs
Ancient viral DNA shapes early embryo development
New study paves way for immunotherapies tailored for childhood cancers
Association of waist circumference with all-cause and cardiovascular mortalities in diabetes from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2003–2018
A new chapter in Roman administration: Insights from a late Roman inscription
Global trust in science remains strong
New global research reveals strong public trust in science
Inflammation may explain stomach problems in psoriasis sufferers
Guidance on animal-borne infections in the Canadian Arctic
Fatty muscles raise the risk of serious heart disease regardless of overall body weight
HKU ecologists uncover significant ecological impact of hybrid grouper release through religious practices
New register opens to crown Champion Trees across the U.S.
A unified approach to health data exchange
New superconductor with hallmark of unconventional superconductivity discovered
Global HIV study finds that cardiovascular risk models underestimate for key populations
New study offers insights into how populations conform or go against the crowd
Development of a high-performance AI device utilizing ion-controlled spin wave interference in magnetic materials
WashU researchers map individual brain dynamics
Technology for oxidizing atmospheric methane won’t help the climate
US Department of Energy announces Early Career Research Program for FY 2025
PECASE winners: 3 UVA engineering professors receive presidential early career awards
‘Turn on the lights’: DAVD display helps navy divers navigate undersea conditions
MSU researcher’s breakthrough model sheds light on solar storms and space weather
Nebraska psychology professor recognized with Presidential Early Career Award
[Press-News.org] In-home visits reduce drug use, depression in pregnant teensSuccessful intervention in American Indian communities could be used widely in low-income groups across the country, researchers say