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Evaluation of a mental health service for young children: development, outcome and satisfaction

Evaluation of a mental health service for young children: development, outcome and satisfaction
Evaluation of a mental health service for young children: development, outcome and satisfaction
Background: Over a 10-year period (1984–1996) a child guidance clinic developed a service in the community for parents with young children with mental health problems. This included support for primary care staff and training courses. The clinical input to the young children developed from a clinic within the child guidance clinic (1984–87), to a specialist clinic for under fives (1990–91) to a service run by a nurse in the community (1994–95), with nurses referring to colleagues only the more complicated cases.
Method: The work in 1990–91 was compared with the work in 1994–95. The family and clinic scored the outcome of the work, by recording the severity of the problem, separately, on unanchored 5-point Likert scales before and after treatment. For the evaluation in 1994–95 a satisfaction questionnaire was also developed. The cost of running the two different clinics was calculated.
Results: The results indicated that there was a slight fall in the effect size for the clinical work in 1994–95, but this method of working was two-thirds of the cost of the previous clinic. The parents were satisfied with both services. The post-contact parental satisfaction questionnaire had face validity, construct validity and internal consistency.
Conclusions: Nurses working on their own in the community can be a cost effective method for working with families with young children. Some families will need to be referred on to specialist teams and more work needs to be done to establish which families and when referral is appropriate. The questionnaire was shown to be a valid and reliable way of assessing family satisfaction.
young children, tier two, parenting, satisfaction, nurse therapist, primary mental health worker, questionnaire validation
1475-357X
68-77
Thompson, Margaret J.J.
bfe8522c-b252-4771-8036-744e93357c67
Coll, Xavier
338e4105-6975-4508-b95a-bb6a52d704af
Wilkinson, Suzanne
a6ea4883-cce2-4ec1-b445-1580109a2f49
Utenbroek, Daan
c626b78a-71d3-4938-8dd8-3cd467d644c8
Tobias, Aurelio
6597f20c-e820-4f86-b90f-703369bed716
Thompson, Margaret J.J.
bfe8522c-b252-4771-8036-744e93357c67
Coll, Xavier
338e4105-6975-4508-b95a-bb6a52d704af
Wilkinson, Suzanne
a6ea4883-cce2-4ec1-b445-1580109a2f49
Utenbroek, Daan
c626b78a-71d3-4938-8dd8-3cd467d644c8
Tobias, Aurelio
6597f20c-e820-4f86-b90f-703369bed716

Thompson, Margaret J.J., Coll, Xavier, Wilkinson, Suzanne, Utenbroek, Daan and Tobias, Aurelio (2003) Evaluation of a mental health service for young children: development, outcome and satisfaction. Child and Adolescent Mental Health, 8 (2), 68-77. (doi:10.1111/1475-3588.00049).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Over a 10-year period (1984–1996) a child guidance clinic developed a service in the community for parents with young children with mental health problems. This included support for primary care staff and training courses. The clinical input to the young children developed from a clinic within the child guidance clinic (1984–87), to a specialist clinic for under fives (1990–91) to a service run by a nurse in the community (1994–95), with nurses referring to colleagues only the more complicated cases.
Method: The work in 1990–91 was compared with the work in 1994–95. The family and clinic scored the outcome of the work, by recording the severity of the problem, separately, on unanchored 5-point Likert scales before and after treatment. For the evaluation in 1994–95 a satisfaction questionnaire was also developed. The cost of running the two different clinics was calculated.
Results: The results indicated that there was a slight fall in the effect size for the clinical work in 1994–95, but this method of working was two-thirds of the cost of the previous clinic. The parents were satisfied with both services. The post-contact parental satisfaction questionnaire had face validity, construct validity and internal consistency.
Conclusions: Nurses working on their own in the community can be a cost effective method for working with families with young children. Some families will need to be referred on to specialist teams and more work needs to be done to establish which families and when referral is appropriate. The questionnaire was shown to be a valid and reliable way of assessing family satisfaction.

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More information

Published date: 2003
Keywords: young children, tier two, parenting, satisfaction, nurse therapist, primary mental health worker, questionnaire validation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 58913
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/58913
ISSN: 1475-357X
PURE UUID: 08a195cc-4a57-4737-9194-bc134a6731e7

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Date deposited: 19 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:13

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Contributors

Author: Margaret J.J. Thompson
Author: Xavier Coll
Author: Suzanne Wilkinson
Author: Daan Utenbroek
Author: Aurelio Tobias

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