4.1 Article

Randomized Trial of a Training Program to Improve Home Visitor Communication around Sensitive Topics

Journal

MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL
Volume 22, Issue -, Pages 70-78

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10995-018-2531-0

Keywords

Home visiting; Training evaluation; Communication; Fidelity; Motivational interviewing

Funding

  1. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration grant [D89MC28267]

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IntroductionStrong communication skills are necessary to engage families, perform accurate assessments, and motivate behavior change around sensitive issues encountered in home visiting.MethodsA two-arm, cluster-randomized trial evaluated the impact of a trans-model communications training course for home visitors. Fourteen home visiting programs in Maryland were assigned to a training intervention (n=7 programs; 30 visitors) or wait-list control group (n=7 programs; 34 visitors). Independent observers assessed training fidelity. Visitor's attitudes, knowledge, and confidence were assessed through surveys. Their skills were assessed through coding of video-recorded visits with standardized mothers. Data were collected at baseline, within 2 weeks post-training, and at 2 months post-training. Regression models accounted for clustering within programs and controlled for characteristics on which study groups differed at baseline.ResultsIndependent observers rated the training highly on fidelity and acceptability. Home visitors rated it as useful, consistent with their model, and worth the effort. Immediately following the training, the training group scored higher than the control group on a range of indicators in all domainsknowledge, attitudes, confidence, and skills in using motivational communication techniques. At 2 months post-training, impacts on knowledge and attitudes persisted; impacts on confidence and observed skill were attenuated.DiscussionThe training course showed favorable immediate impacts on knowledge, attitudes, confidence, and skills, and long-term impacts on home visitor knowledge and attitudes. The findings underscore the need for ongoing reinforcement of skills following training.

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