Manuscript Details

Easterbrooks, M. A., Jacobs, F. H., Bartlett, J. D., Goldberg, J., Contreras, M. M., Kotake, C., Raskin, M. & Chaudhuri, J. H. (2012). Initial findings from a randomized, controlled trial of Healthy Families Massachusetts: Early program impacts on young mothers' parenting. Report to the Pew Center on the States. Medford, MA: Tufts University.

Moderate rating
Study reviewed under: Handbook of Procedures and Standards, Version 1
Author Affiliation

Authors are affiliated with Tufts University.

Funding Sources

Not reported

Study Design
Design Attrition Baseline equivalence Confounding factors Valid, reliable measures?
Randomized controlled trial Low

Not established on race/ethnicity or SES; outcomes not feasible to assess at baseline.

None

Not assessed in manuscripts reviewed under Handbook of Procedures and Standards, Version 1

Findings that rate moderate or high in this manuscript

Reductions in child maltreatment
Outcome measure Timing of follow-up Rating Direction of Effect Effect size (absolute value) Stastical significance Sample size Sample description
Substantiated child maltreatment by any perpetrator: total substantiations (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Substantiated child maltreatment by any perpetrator: any type of maltreatment (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Substantiated child maltreatment by any perpetrator: neglect only (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Substantiated child maltreatment by any perpetrator: physical abuse only (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Substantiated child maltreatment by any perpetrator: neglect and physical abuse (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Substantiated child maltreatment, mother perpetrated: total substantiations (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Substantiated child maltreatment, mother perpetrated: any type of maltreatment (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Substantiated child maltreatment, mother perpetrated: neglect only (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Substantiated child maltreatment, mother perpetrated: physical abuse only (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Substantiated child maltreatment, mother perpetrated: neglect and physical abuse (DCF reports) - Impact sample 1 year post-enrollment Moderate
Not statistically significant, p ≥ 0.05 687 HFM Impact sample
Effect rating key
Favorable finding / Statistically significant
Unfavorable finding / Statistically significant
Ambiguous finding / Statistically significant
No effect / Not statistically significant
Study Participants

Adolescent women were randomly assigned to Healthy Families Massachusetts (HFM) or to a control group. Eighteen HFM sites were included in the evaluation. Within the study, 837 women were recruited and randomized (information based on correspondence with author). Sixty percent of women were assigned to HFM and 40 percent to the control group (T=517, C=320). Women recruited for the study were at least 16 years old, had not received HFM services in the past, were fluent in English or Spanish, and were able to provide informed consent. Women could be pregnant or parenting at enrollment. Participants were included within the impact study analysis sample if they signed a release for administrative data and participated in a half-hour telephone intake interview (687 overall, 420 within the treatment condition and 267 within the control condition). Among women in the analysis sample, 37 percent were white non-Hispanic, 32 percent were Hispanic, 20 percent were black non-Hispanic, and 12 percent were of another racial or ethnic background; most (88 percent) were born in the U.S. and preferred English (75 percent). At enrollment, women in the analysis sample were, on average, 18.6 years old.

Setting

Eighteen HFM local program sites in Massachusetts.

Home Visiting Services

Services included home visits with additional contact via phone and electronic media as needed. Home visits included goal-setting activities, group-based activities (including parenting education, peer support groups, social gatherings), and linkages and referrals to other resources. Home visits were offered weekly or biweekly during pregnancy, weekly for six months after the birth of the baby, and then in decreasing intensity based on family progress until the child was three years old.

Comparison Conditions

Control group members were assessed using a brief intake interview, and were offered referral information and/or resources based on identified needs, such as mental health services, referrals to the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) and referrals to the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families program (TANF). They also received monthly mailings from HFM administrators about child development.

Were any subgroups examined?
No
Subgroups examined

• Mother reports being victim of maltreatment during own childhood (yes or no)

This study included participants with the following characteristics at enrollment:

Race/Ethnicity

The race and ethnicity categories may sum to more than 100 percent if Hispanic ethnicity was reported separately or respondents could select two or more race or ethnicity categories.

Black or African American
20%
Hispanic or Latino
32%
White
37%
Unknown
12%

Maternal Education

Data not available

Other Characteristics

Enrollment in means-tested programs
19%