Manuscript Detail

View Revisions

Goodman, W. B., Dodge, K. A., Bai, Y., O’Donnell, K. J., & Murphy, R. A. (2019). Randomized controlled trial of Family Connects: Effects on child emergency medical care from birth to 24 months. Development and Psychopathology, 31(5), 1863–1872.

Model(s) Reviewed: Family Connects
Manuscript screening details
Screening decision Screening conclusion HomVEE procedures and standards version
Passes screens Eligible for review Version 2
Study design details
Rating Design Attrition Baseline equivalence Compromised randomization Confounding factors Valid, reliable measure(s)
High Randomized controlled trial Low

Not assessed for randomized controlled trials with low attrition

No

No

Yes

Notes:

Findings about physician cost data are not eligible for HomVEE review, because they are not in one of HomVEE's eligible outcome domains.

Study characteristics
Study participants Families were eligible for this study if they lived in Durham County and the pregnant person gave birth in one of two Durham County hospitals between July 1, 2009, and December 31, 2010. Families were randomly assigned to one of two groups based on the infant’s birth date. Families whose infants had an even-numbered birth date were assigned to receive Family Connects, and families whose infants had an odd-numbered birth date were assigned to the comparison group and received other community services as usual. Out of all eligible families randomly assigned to receive Family Connects or other community services, 682 families were randomly selected via birth records to participate in an impact evaluation when their infants were 6 months old. A total of 549 families (269 families in the intervention group and 280 in the comparison group) participated in this impact evaluation. Eighteen families (nine families in the intervention group and nine comparison group families) were declared ineligible after an examination of hospital discharge records. Hospital administrative records were received and coded between birth and age 24 months and between ages 12 and 24 months. An at-home interview was conducted when infants were six months old.
Setting The study took place in Durham County, North Carolina.
Intervention services The Family Connects model involves four to seven contacts with families—the first shortly after birth (ideally in the hospital, where a staff member schedules the initial home visit), followed by one to three home visits with a registered nurse, one or two follow-up contacts between the nurse and family or community service providers to facilitate successful connections, and a telephone follow-up one month after the nurse closes the case. During home visits, the nurse engages with the mother to provide a brief educational intervention, to answer the family’s questions and concerns about infant care, and to assess the family’s needs. Assessment results for each area indicate whether no subsequent intervention is needed; whether the nurse should deliver a short-term, educational intervention; or whether the family should be connected to community resources that address that need.
Comparison conditions Families in the comparison condition were not offered Family Connects, but did receive other community services as usual.
Subgroups examined This field lists subgroups examined in the manuscript (even if they were not replicated in other samples and not reported on the summary page for this model’s report).

• Medicaid/no insurance at birth • Mother minority status • Mother single-parent status • Infant gender

Funding sources This research was supported by Award Number R01HD069981 from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute for Child Health and Human Development, the Duke Endowment, and the Pew Center on the States.
Author affiliation Authors were affiliated with the Center for Child and Family Policy, the Sanford School of Public Policy, and the Center for Child and Family Health at Duke University. The authors participated in the Family Connects model dissemination.
Peer reviewed Yes
Study Registration:

Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: None found. SocialScienceRegistry.org Identifier: None found. Registry of Efficacy and Effectiveness Studies Identifier: None found. Study registration was assessed by HomVEE for Clinicaltrials.gov beginning with the 2014 review, and for other registries beginning with the 2021 review.

Findings that rate moderate or high

Child health
Rating Outcome measure Effect Sample Timing of follow-up Sample size Intervention group Comparison group Group difference Effect size Statistical significance Notes
High

Inpatient hospital overnights (component of total child emergency medical care)

FavorableUnfavorable or ambiguousNo Effect

Children born in Durham County, North Carolina during the 18-month study period

Through age 24 months

531 children Adjusted mean = 0.13 Adjusted mean = 0.86 Mean difference = -0.73 Study reported = 0.24

Statistically significant, p= <0.001

High

Inpatient hospital overnights (component of total child emergency medical care)

FavorableUnfavorable or ambiguousNo Effect

Children born in Durham County, North Carolina during the 18-month study period

Age 12 - 24 months

531 children Adjusted mean = 0.02 Adjusted mean = 0.11 Mean difference = -0.09 Study reported = 0.12

Not statistically significant, p= 0.06

High

Outpatient ER visits (component of total child emergency medical care)

FavorableUnfavorable or ambiguousNo Effect

Children born in Durham County, North Carolina during the 18-month study period

Age 12 - 24 months

531 children Adjusted mean = 0.71 Adjusted mean = 0.72 Mean difference = -0.01 Study reported = 0.01

Not statistically significant, p= 0.88

High

Outpatient ER visits (component of total child emergency medical care)

FavorableUnfavorable or ambiguousNo Effect

Children born in Durham County, North Carolina during the 18-month study period

Through age 24 months

531 children Adjusted mean = 1.39 Adjusted mean = 1.55 Mean difference = -0.16 Study reported = 0.08

Not statistically significant, p= 0.47

High

Total child emergency medical care

FavorableUnfavorable or ambiguousNo Effect

Children born in Durham County, North Carolina during the 18-month study period

Age 12 - 24 months

531 children Adjusted mean = 0.73 Adjusted mean = 0.84 Mean difference = -0.11 Study reported = 0.07

Not statistically significant, p= 0.73

High

Total child emergency medical care

FavorableUnfavorable or ambiguousNo Effect

Children born in Durham County, North Carolina during the 18-month study period

Through age 24 months

531 children Adjusted mean = 1.52 Adjusted mean = 2.41 Mean difference = -0.89 Study reported = 0.24

Statistically significant, p= <0.001

Reductions in child maltreatment
Rating Outcome measure Effect Sample Timing of follow-up Sample size Intervention group Comparison group Group difference Effect size Statistical significance Notes
High

Emergency medical care for accidents or injuries

FavorableUnfavorable or ambiguousNo Effect

Children born in Durham County, North Carolina during the 18-month study period

Through age 24 months

531 children Adjusted mean = 0.27 Adjusted mean = 0.30 Mean difference = -0.03 Study reported = 0.07

Not statistically significant, p= 0.45

High

Maltreatment-related injuries

FavorableUnfavorable or ambiguousNo Effect

Children born in Durham County, North Carolina during the 18-month study period

Through age 24 months

531 children Adjusted mean = 0.02 Adjusted mean = 0.02 Mean difference = 0.00 Not available

Not statistically significant, p= <0.30

High

Multiple emergency visits for accidents and injuries

FavorableUnfavorable or ambiguousNo Effect

Children born in Durham County, North Carolina during the 18-month study period

Through age 24 months

531 children Adjusted mean = 0.03 Adjusted mean = 0.06 Mean difference = -0.03 Not available

Not statistically significant, p= 0.10