Behavioral and Socioemotional Outcomes Through Age 5 Years of the Legacy for Children Public Health Approach to Improving Developmental Outcomes Among Children Born Into Poverty

We evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Mothers were recruited prenatally or at the birth of a child to participate in Legacy parenting groups for 3 to 5 years. A set of 2 randomized trials in Miami, Florida, and L...

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Published inAmerican journal of public health (1971) Vol. 103; no. 6; pp. 1058 - 1066
Main Authors KAMINSKI, Jennifer W, PEROU, Ruth, VISSER, Susanna N, SCOTT, Keith G, BECKWITH, Leila, HOWARD, Judy, CAMILLE SMITH, D, DANIELSON, Melissa L
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LanguageEnglish
Published Washington, DC American Public Health Association 01.06.2013
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Abstract We evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Mothers were recruited prenatally or at the birth of a child to participate in Legacy parenting groups for 3 to 5 years. A set of 2 randomized trials in Miami, Florida, and Los Angeles, California, between 2001 and 2009 assessed 574 mother-child pairs when the children were 6, 12, 24, 36, 48, and 60 months old. Intent-to-treat analyses from 12 to 60 months compared groups on child behavioral and socioemotional outcomes. Children of mothers in the intervention group were at lower risk for behavioral concerns at 24 months and socioemotional problems at 48 months in Miami, and lower risk for hyperactive behavior at 60 months in Los Angeles. Longitudinal analyses indicated that children of intervention mothers in Miami were at lower risk for behavior problems from 24 to 60 months of age. Randomized controlled trials documented effectiveness of the Legacy model over time while allowing for implementation adaptations by 2 different sites. Broadly disseminable, parent-focused prevention models such as Legacy have potential for public health impact. These investments in prevention might reduce the need for later intervention strategies.
AbstractList We evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Mothers were recruited prenatally or at the birth of a child to participate in Legacy parenting groups for 3 to 5 years. A set of 2 randomized trials in Miami, Florida, and Los Angeles, California, between 2001 and 2009 assessed 574 mother-child pairs when the children were 6, 12, 24, 36, 48, and 60 months old. Intent-to-treat analyses from 12 to 60 months compared groups on child behavioral and socioemotional outcomes. Children of mothers in the intervention group were at lower risk for behavioral concerns at 24 months and socioemotional problems at 48 months in Miami, and lower risk for hyperactive behavior at 60 months in Los Angeles. Longitudinal analyses indicated that children of intervention mothers in Miami were at lower risk for behavior problems from 24 to 60 months of age. Randomized controlled trials documented effectiveness of the Legacy model over time while allowing for implementation adaptations by 2 different sites. Broadly disseminable, parent-focused prevention models such as Legacy have potential for public health impact. These investments in prevention might reduce the need for later intervention strategies.
Objectives. We evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Methods. Mothers were recruited prenatally or at the birth of a child to participate in Legacy parenting groups for 3 to 5 years. A set of 2 randomized trials in Miami, Florida, and Los Angeles, California, between 2001 and 2009 assessed 574 mother-child pairs when the children were 6, 12, 24, 36, 48, and 60 months old. Intent-to-treat analyses from 12 to 60 months compared groups on child behavioral and socioemotional outcomes. Results. Children of mothers in the intervention group were at lower risk for behavioral concerns at 24 months and socioemotional problems at 48 months in Miami, and lower risk for hyperactive behavior at 60 months in Los Angeles. Longitudinal analyses indicated that children of intervention mothers in Miami were at lower risk for behavior problems from 24 to 60 months of age. Conclusions. Randomized controlled trials documented effectiveness of the Legacy model over time while allowing for implementation adaptations by 2 different sites. Broadly disseminable, parent-focused prevention models such as Legacy have potential for public health impact. These investments in prevention might reduce the need for later intervention strategies.
OBJECTIVESWe evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. METHODSMothers were recruited prenatally or at the birth of a child to participate in Legacy parenting groups for 3 to 5 years. A set of 2 randomized trials in Miami, Florida, and Los Angeles, California, between 2001 and 2009 assessed 574 mother-child pairs when the children were 6, 12, 24, 36, 48, and 60 months old. Intent-to-treat analyses from 12 to 60 months compared groups on child behavioral and socioemotional outcomes. RESULTSChildren of mothers in the intervention group were at lower risk for behavioral concerns at 24 months and socioemotional problems at 48 months in Miami, and lower risk for hyperactive behavior at 60 months in Los Angeles. Longitudinal analyses indicated that children of intervention mothers in Miami were at lower risk for behavior problems from 24 to 60 months of age. CONCLUSIONSRandomized controlled trials documented effectiveness of the Legacy model over time while allowing for implementation adaptations by 2 different sites. Broadly disseminable, parent-focused prevention models such as Legacy have potential for public health impact. These investments in prevention might reduce the need for later intervention strategies.
We evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Mothers were recruited prenatally or at the birth of a child to participate in Legacy parenting groups for 3 to 5 years. A set of 2 randomized trials in Miami, Florida, and Los Angeles, California, between 2001 and 2009 assessed 574 mother-child pairs when the children were 6, 12, 24, 36, 48, and 60 months old. Intent-to-treat analyses from 12 to 60 months compared groups on child behavioral and socioemotional outcomes. Children of mothers in the intervention group were at lower risk for behavioral concerns at 24 months and socioemotional problems at 48 months in Miami, and lower risk for hyperactive behavior at 60 months in Los Angeles. Longitudinal analyses indicated that children of intervention mothers in Miami were at lower risk for behavior problems from 24 to 60 months of age. Randomized controlled trials documented effectiveness of the Legacy model over time while allowing for implementation adaptations by 2 different sites. Broadly disseminable, parent-focused prevention models such as Legacy have potential for public health impact. These investments in prevention might reduce the need for later intervention strategies.
Objectives. We evaluated Legacy for Children , a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Methods. Mothers were recruited prenatally or at the birth of a child to participate in Legacy parenting groups for 3 to 5 years. A set of 2 randomized trials in Miami, Florida, and Los Angeles, California, between 2001 and 2009 assessed 574 mother-child pairs when the children were 6, 12, 24, 36, 48, and 60 months old. Intent-to-treat analyses from 12 to 60 months compared groups on child behavioral and socioemotional outcomes. Results. Children of mothers in the intervention group were at lower risk for behavioral concerns at 24 months and socioemotional problems at 48 months in Miami, and lower risk for hyperactive behavior at 60 months in Los Angeles. Longitudinal analyses indicated that children of intervention mothers in Miami were at lower risk for behavior problems from 24 to 60 months of age. Conclusions. Randomized controlled trials documented effectiveness of the Legacy model over time while allowing for implementation adaptations by 2 different sites. Broadly disseminable, parent-focused prevention models such as Legacy have potential for public health impact. These investments in prevention might reduce the need for later intervention strategies.
Author DANIELSON, Melissa L
PEROU, Ruth
HOWARD, Judy
CAMILLE SMITH, D
SCOTT, Keith G
VISSER, Susanna N
BECKWITH, Leila
KAMINSKI, Jennifer W
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IngestDate Tue Sep 17 21:14:40 EDT 2024
Thu Oct 24 23:31:11 EDT 2024
Thu Oct 10 18:59:46 EDT 2024
Fri Dec 06 02:33:29 EST 2024
Tue Oct 15 23:47:10 EDT 2024
Sun Oct 22 16:08:05 EDT 2023
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Issue 6
Keywords Human
Improvement
Poverty
Prognosis
Development
Evolution
Emotion emotionality
Behavior
Child
Age
Social aspect
Public health
Language English
License CC BY 4.0
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content type line 23
Peer Reviewed
J. W. Kaminski led the drafting of the article and contributed to analytic decisions and interpretation of results. R. Perou contributed to the intervention and study design, critically reviewed the article, and supervised the evaluation. S. N. Visser designed and conducted statistical analyses, assisted in writing the article, and provided supervision of the evaluation. K. G. Scott, L. Beckwith, and J. Howard guided the study conception and design, supervised development and implementation of the intervention, and critically reviewed the article. D. C. Smith contributed to the study and intervention design, critically reviewed the article, and provided supervision and technical support to the evaluation. M. L. Danielson conducted analyses, provided statistical expertise, and critically reviewed the article.
Contributors
OpenAccessLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3698746
PMID 23597356
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PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2013-06-01
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2013-06-01
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PublicationTitle American journal of public health (1971)
PublicationTitleAlternate Am J Public Health
PublicationYear 2013
Publisher American Public Health Association
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Snippet We evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Mothers were recruited prenatally...
Objectives. We evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Methods. Mothers were...
We evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Mothers were recruited prenatally...
OBJECTIVESWe evaluated Legacy for Children, a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. METHODSMothers were...
Objectives. We evaluated Legacy for Children , a public health strategy to improve child health and development among low-income families. Methods. Mothers...
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StartPage 1058
SubjectTerms Adult
Age
Age Factors
Behavior
Biological and medical sciences
Child Behavior Disorders - epidemiology
Child Welfare
Child, Preschool
Children & youth
Clinical trials
Colleges & universities
Curricula
Disease control
Families & family life
Florida
Food
Food stamps
General aspects
Health care
Health maintenance organizations
Health Promotion
Health Promotion - methods
HMOs
Humans
Infant
Intervention
Logistic Models
Los Angeles
Low income groups
Low-Income Children
Medicaid
Medical sciences
Mental health
Miscellaneous
Mother-Child Relations
Mothers
Nutrition research
Parenting
Parents & parenting
Participation
Poverty
Prevention
Program Evaluation
Public health
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Research and Practice
Social Adjustment
Socioeconomic factors
Young Adult
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Title Behavioral and Socioemotional Outcomes Through Age 5 Years of the Legacy for Children Public Health Approach to Improving Developmental Outcomes Among Children Born Into Poverty
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