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    <Citation xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
        <Title>Metadata record for Healthy Steps for Young Children Program National Evaluation, 1996-2001:  [United States]</Title>
        <Creator>ICPSR</Creator>
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        ICPSR metadata records are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 
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        <Citation xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
            <Title>Healthy Steps for Young Children Program National Evaluation, 1996-2001:  [United States]</Title>
 				
	    	
				<Creator xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1" affiliation="Johns Hopkins University. Bloomberg School of Public Health. Women's and Children's Health Policy Center">Guyer, Bernard</Creator>
	    	
	    	<Publisher>Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research</Publisher>
  			<Contributor role="distributor">ICPSR</Contributor>
   			<PublicationDate>
    			<SimpleDate>2006-03-30</SimpleDate>
   			</PublicationDate>
   			<InternationalIdentifier xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1" type="ICPSR Number">4049</InternationalIdentifier>
   			<InternationalIdentifier xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1" type="DOI">doi://10.3886/ICPSR04049.v1</InternationalIdentifier>
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        <Abstract isIdentifiable="true" id="Abstract04049">
            <Content xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
            <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" id="Summary04049"><p>The Healthy Steps for Young Children program began in
 1995 as a new approach to primary health care for young children,
 birth to age three. The program is intended to enhance early pediatric
 care by incorporating preventive developmental and behavioral services
 as part of a comprehensive, whole-child, whole-family model of health
 care and to help provide mothers and fathers with the childrearing
 information and guidance they seek.</p>
 
 <p>The evaluation of Healthy Steps consisted of three components: the
 National Evaluation, the Affiliate Evaluation, and the Embedded
 Observational Study. All data contained in these public release data
 sets come from the National Evaluation. For additional information on
 the Affiliate Evaluation or the Embedded Observational Study, please
 visit
 <a href = "http://www.jhsph.edu/WCHPC_/Projects/Healthy_Steps/index.html">
 http://www.jhsph.edu/WCHPC_/Projects/Healthy_Steps/index.html</a>.</p>
 
 <p>These data were gathered to assess whether the Healthy Steps
 program was successful in reorienting pediatric practice to emphasize
 child development issues in increasing parents' knowledge about early
 nurturing of infants and parents' involvement in their children's
 development and in promoting parents' practices that improve the
 health, safety, and health care utilization of their children.</p>
 
 <p>The data are organized as follows:</p>
 
 <list type="bulleted">
 <itm><p><hi>Parent Forms: Newborn</hi></p> 
 <p>The newborn form was used to gather data on the baby's characteristics, 
 demographic characteristics of the mother, father, and family, prenatal 
 utilization of services, health behaviors of the mother and father, and
 parents' decisions about a pediatric provider for their newborn.</p></itm>
 
 <itm><p><hi>Parent Forms: 6 Month</hi></p>
 <p>The 6 month form was used to gather information on selected family
 demographic characteristics, child's health, parenting practices, and 
 health behaviors of the mother and father. Questions included the
 frequency of injuries, emergency department visits, and hospitalization
 in the past 6 months, use of safety devices, activities that promote
 learning and development, sources of information on speech development,
 child care arrangements, smoking practices, and mother's receipt of
 postpartum care.</p></itm>
 
 <itm><p><hi>Parent Forms: 12 Month</hi></p>
 <p>Like the 6 month form, the 12 month form was used to gather
 information on selected family demographic characteristics, child's
 health, parenting practices, and health behaviors of the mother and
 father. Questions included the frequency of injuries, emergency
 department visits, and hospitalization in the past 12 months, use of
 safety devices, activities that promote learning and development,
 sources of information on speech development, child care arrangements,
 smoking practices, and mother's receipt of postpartum care.</p></itm>
 
 <itm><p><hi>Medical Record Abstraction: Vaccinations</hi></p>
 <p>This file contains demographic and vaccination data, including gender,
 race/ethnicity, and insurance provider.</p></itm>
 
 <itm><p><hi>Medical Record Abstraction: Medical Visits</hi></p>
 <p>This file contains data abstracted from forms completed for every
 visit recorded in the medical record or other primary care files,
 including type visit and whether a physical assessment was conducted.</p></itm>
 
 <itm><p><hi>Medical Record Abstraction: Referrals/Consultations</hi></p>
 <p>These data are limited to information on any referrals or consultations
 noted in the child's medical record or other primary care files,
 including type of and reason for the referral.</p></itm>
 
 <itm><p><hi>Medical Record Abstraction: Hospitalizations/ED Visits</hi></p>
 <p>These data are limited to information on any hospitalization, emergency
 department visit, or urgent care visit recorded in the child's medical
 record or other primary care files, including the type of and reason
 for the visit.</p></itm>
 
 <itm><p><hi>Healthy Steps Specialist Contact Logs</hi></p>
 <p>Data contained in this file represent every interaction between Healthy
 Steps Specialists and the family, including home visits, office visits,
 telephone calls to or from the family, parent groups, mailings, and
 other types of contacts, such as hospital visits. Information collected on
 each contact included the date of contact, type of contact, person
 contacted, status of the contact, reason for the contact, whether
 a handout was given out or a referral made during the contact, the issues/
 problems discussed during the contact, and any action taken by the
 Healthy Steps Specialist.</p></itm>
 
 <itm><p><hi>Parent Interviews: 2-4 Month</hi></p>
 <p>The 2-4 month interview included questions about the respondent's
 knowledge of child development, his/her sense of competence about
 childrearing, his/her perception of support for childrearing
 activities from both formal and informal sources, and his/her
 engagement in activities with the child that promote health, learning,
 and development. The interview also gathered information on the socio-
 demographic characteristics of the family, including the mother's and
 father's education, marital status, employment, income, and household
 composition.</p></itm>
 
 <itm><p><hi>Parent Interviews: 30-33 Month</hi></p>
 <p>The 30-33 month interview is the source of data on parent and child 
 outcomes and assessed the extent to which families received the Healthy
 Steps intervention. Specifically, parents were asked about utilization
 of health-related services and about the child's health and progress
 in reaching age-appropriate developmental milestones, concerns the parent
 had about the child's development or behavior, and whether the child was
 referred to services for a behavior or developmentally-related problem.
 Additional questions addressed parenting activities that promote 
 development, family routines, engagement in safety activities, the
 mother's general health status, use of substances, use of mental health
 services, and use of the child's doctor or her obstetrician/gynecologist
 as a source for discussing problems with depression and use of 
 preventive health care.</p></itm>
</list></div>
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        </Abstract>
        
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      		<Subject codeListAgency="ICPSR">ICPSR.V.A</Subject>
      	
      		<Subject codeListAgency="CCEERC">CCEERC.II.B</Subject>
      	
		
      		<Keyword>child care</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>child development</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>child health</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>child rearing</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>families</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>infants</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>parent child relationship</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>parenting skills</Keyword>
      	
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		<Description>
			
				United States
			
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    <ReferenceDate>
		
				
      		<StartDate>1996-09</StartDate>
      		<EndDate>2001-11</EndDate>
			
			
      		
    </ReferenceDate>
    
     
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         </Coverage>
 

   		
   			<AnalysisUnitsCovered>Children and families</AnalysisUnitsCovered>
    	


	    	
	    		<KindOfData>survey data and administrative records data</KindOfData>
	    	


        
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   <UniverseScheme id="UniverseScheme04049">
	    	
    <Universe id="Universe04049_1">
     <HumanReadable>All possible cases of children born at 15 selected sites
within the United States between September 1996 and November 1998</HumanReadable>
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    <SamplingProcedure id="SamplingProcedure04049">
     <Content xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">Fifteen primary pediatric practices across the country
 were selected to participate in the National Evaluation. Six of the
 sites featured a randomized, case/control model for evaluation in
 which families attending the same clinic were randomly assigned to
 receive Healthy Steps services (cases) or to receive the standard care
 provided by the practice (control). The remaining nine sites used a
 quasi-experimental design in which one practice delivered Healthy
 Steps services to all its patients and a comparison practice was
 selected in the same community or nearby community that served a
 population similar to that at the Healthy Steps practice where
 families received the standard pediatric practice care provided by the
 practice. To be eligible for enrollment in the evaluation, the
 newborn had to be less than four weeks of age and a patient at the
 Healthy Steps practice. Children were not eligible to participate if
 their parents expected to move from the area or change site of care
 within six months, their mother (or custodial parent) did not speak
 English or Spanish fluently, they were to be adopted (hospital only)
 or placed in foster care, or they were too ill to make an office visit
within the first 28 days of life.</Content>
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    		personal interviews, self-administered interviews,
telephone interviews, and medical record abstractions
    	
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		<DataCollectionDate>
 		
				
      		<StartDate xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">1996-09</StartDate>
      		<EndDate xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">2002-02</EndDate>
			
			
      		
      		</DataCollectionDate>

    


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 ICPSR also routinely creates ready-to-go data files along with setups in the major statistical software 
 formats as well as standard codebooks to accompany the data. In addition to these procedures, ICPSR 
 performed the following processing steps for this data collection:</p>

	<ul>
  
   		
			<li>
		    	
				
				
				
				
				
				Performed consistency checks.
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				Checked for undocumented or out-of-range codes.
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					AVAILABLE.  This study is freely available to the general public.
                
                  
                

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The original collector of the data, ICPSR, and the relevant funding agency bear no 
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			The user manuals are provided by the principal
 investigator as Portable Document Format (PDF) files. The PDF file
 format was developed by Adobe Systems Incorporated and can be accessed
 using PDF reader software, such as the Adobe Acrobat Reader.
 Information on how to obtain a copy of the Acrobat Reader is provided
on the ICPSR Web site.
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