Elucidating care for families with multiple problems in routine practice: Self-registered practice and program elements of practitioners

Families with multiple problems (FMP), also defined as multiproblem families or multistressed families, face multiple, severe, chronic and intertwined problems in different areas of life. Content and provision of interventions targeting FMP in routine practice may largely deviate from guidelines in intervention manuals. The aim of this study was to identify practice and program elements provided to FMP in routine practice, including the intensity, manner of provision, and recipients, per intervention phase (starting-, care- and end phase). We selected interventions with at least moderate (d ≥... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Visscher, L.
Evenboer, K.E.
Scholte, R.H.J.
Yperen, van, T.A.
Knot-Dickscheit, J.
Jansen, D.E.M.C.
Reijneveld, S.A.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Reihe/Periodikum: Visscher , L , Evenboer , K E , Scholte , R H J , Yperen, van , T A , Knot-Dickscheit , J , Jansen , D E M C & Reijneveld , S A 2020 , ' Elucidating care for families with multiple problems in routine practice: Self-registered practice and program elements of practitioners ' , Children and Youth Services Review , vol. 111 , 104856 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.104856
Schlagwörter: Child and adolescent social care / Families with multiple problems / Practice elements / Program elements / Interventions / RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL / MULTIPROBLEM FAMILIES / MULTISYSTEMIC THERAPY / OUTCOMES / NETHERLANDS / CHILDREN / WORK
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26826710
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/11370/dffd82a3-300d-4303-9be4-3ab2a47919cd

Families with multiple problems (FMP), also defined as multiproblem families or multistressed families, face multiple, severe, chronic and intertwined problems in different areas of life. Content and provision of interventions targeting FMP in routine practice may largely deviate from guidelines in intervention manuals. The aim of this study was to identify practice and program elements provided to FMP in routine practice, including the intensity, manner of provision, and recipients, per intervention phase (starting-, care- and end phase). We selected interventions with at least moderate (d ≥ 0.5) effect sizes in the Dutch context, yielding eight interventions. Practitioners of 26 Dutch organizations systematically registered information on practice and program elements, intensity, manner of provision, and recipients, using the taxonomy of interventions for FMP. Within 474 trajectories we found that elements regarding activation of the social network of FMP were provided least often (in less than 48–77% of the families). Elements were provided mainly through psycho-education (25–33%) and instruction (21–24%). Interventions focused more on parents (53–62%) than on children (26–32%). Program elements hardly changed between phases of interventions, although the number of visits decreased (from an average of six visits a month during the starting phase to four visits during the end phase). An inventory of elements that make part of interventions for FMP allows studying the effectiveness of these interventions in a more detailed way. This yields information that may help to identify the optimal sequence, intensity and duration of elements and enables to better understand outcomes of interventions for FMP.