Transcript Slide 1

Family Nurse Partnership
programme
“There is a magic window during pregnancy…it’s a time
when the desire to be a good mother and raise a healthy,
happy child creates motivation to overcome incredible
obstacles including poverty, instability or abuse with the
help of a well trained nurse”
David Olds. PhD, founder, nurse family partnership.
Changing the world one baby at a time
Why FNP in the UK?
• A child born into the most disadvantaged 5 per cent of families is 100
times more likely to have multiple problems at age 15 than a child from
the 50 per cent best-off families
•Evidence base
•Advances in neuroscience and infant development
•The need for a powerful intervention to bring about change
Family Nurse Partnership Programme
•Preventive, intensive, structured home visiting programme
•Offered to first time mothers under 20 years from early
pregnancy until child 2 years – universally offered to high risk
group
•Licensed programme with fidelity measures to ensure
replication of original research
•High degree of intensity and depth and skill
•Small scale testing in England since April 07, now 113 sites
• large scale RCT started April 09 with 18 sites – including
Sunderland
FNP GOALS
•Connecting with families
to:
•Improve pregnancy
outcomes
•Improve child health
and development and
future school
readiness and
achievement
•Improve parents’
economic selfsufficiency
Programme ‘dosage’
From early pregnancy
until the child is 2 years
old
Weekly – fortnightly –
monthly home visits
Each visit 60-90 minutes
Who should be offered the programme?
•All first time mothers age 19 at LMP
•Living in the agreed catchment area
•Eligible if previous pregnancies ended in miscarriage, termination,
still-birth
•Multiple births included
•Excluded if plan to have baby adopted at birth, plan to leave area for
an extended period of time (3 months or more) before baby reaches
age 2.
What do parents receive?
•Voluntary programme
•Each visit has structure and planned content, covering 6 domains
(personal and child health, parenting, personal goals, friends and
family, environment, local services)
•Regularity and repeated structure of visits provides predictability,
safety and role modelling
•Interactive materials and approaches to learn, develop skills and
do things differently within a safe environment
•Close, therapeutic relationship with the nurse
The content of the visits cover 6 domains
•Personal health – women’s health practices and mental health
•Environmental health – home and neighbourhood
•Life course development – women’s future goals
•Maternal (and paternal) role – skills and knowledge to promote
health and development of their child
•Family and friends – helping to deal with relationship issues and
enhance social support
•Health and human services – linking to other services
The relationship between the nurse and the family lies at the heart of the programme
Guidelines for nurses
•Pregnancy
•Infancy
•Toddlerhood
• Educational resources
Approach
•Therapeutic alliance –
•Focus on bonding, attachment and emotional availability of
caregivers
•Utilises client’s primary motivation as expectant mother
•Strength based , positive and hopeful –
•Using motivational interviewing skills
•Respectful agenda matching
•Setting goals with small steps and positive feedback
Key points
FNP is….
•Licensed
•Structured
•Interactive
•Grounded in theory
•Strength based
•Research based
•Based on a therapeutic
relationship
QUESTIONS