21 results on '"Melhuish, Edward"'
Search Results
2. Effects of Migration on the Language and Literacy Practices of Turkish Parents in England.
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Kolancali, Pinar and Melhuish, Edward
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LITERACY ,IMMIGRANTS ,HOME environment ,PARENT attitudes ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,RESEARCH methodology ,SOCIAL theory ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,LANGUAGE & languages ,FAMILIES ,INTERVIEWING ,REGRESSION analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EXPERIENCE ,PARENT-child relationships ,FAMILY relations ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,SOCIAL integration - Abstract
A survey study of the language and literacy practices of first-generation Turkish immigrant families with 3- to 6-year-old children was conducted in England. Information on family socioeconomic background, migration history and language skills of 168 first-generation Turkish parents was collected through structured interviews in Greater London and Northwest England. The study findings suggest that early childhood experiences that are important for the educational attainment of immigrant children may be affected by the family characteristics and the integration experiences of parents. Regression analyses demonstrated that parents from disadvantaged backgrounds engaged in language and literacy activities less often and preferred Turkish as the interaction language at home. Parent's social integration, measured via parent's length of residence and English skills, significantly predicted their language use with their children. Low social integration was associated with increased Turkish use, whereas high social integration was associated with more frequent language and literacy activities at home. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. A Study of the Long-Term Influence of Early Childhood Education and Care on the Risk for Developing Special Educational Needs.
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Melhuish, Edward, Barnes, Jacqueline, Gardiner, Julian, Siraj, Iram, Sammons, Pamela, Sylva, Kathy, and Taggart, Brenda
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CHILDREN with disabilities ,EARLY childhood education - Abstract
Specialized preschool programs can enhance the development of vulnerable young children at risk of special educational needs (SEN). Less is known about the potential of early childhood education and care (ECEC) provided for the general population. This study includes 2,857 children attending 141 ECEC centres in England and 310 with no ECEC. ECEC quality and effectiveness were assessed. Children's scores on assessments of cognitive development, numeracy, and literacy, and teacher reports of socio-emotional problems at ages 5, 7, 11, and 16 years were used to identify risk of SEN (1 standard deviation beyond the mean). Trend analyses (none vs. low, medium, and high ECEC quality or effectiveness) examined impact of ECEC on risk for cognitive or socio-emotional SEN. Better quality and more effective ECEC reduced risk of cognitive SEN at 5, 11, and 16 years of age, with similar results for socio-emotional SEN. The discussion considers the consistency of the association between children's ECEC experience and risk for SEN, which is found for alternative measures of ECEC, quality derived from observations and effectiveness derived from progress in child outcomes. These different sources for the ECEC measures add credibility to the results. Also the implications for policy and practice are discussed including the recommendation for universal provision of high quality ECEC and ensuring that the most at-risk populations receive the best ECEC available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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4. Randomized controlled trial and economic evaluation of nurse-led group support for young mothers during pregnancy and the first year postpartum versus usual care.
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Barnes, Jacqueline, Stuart, Jane, Allen, Elizabeth, Petrou, Stavros, Sturgess, Joanna, Barlow, Jane, Macdonald, Geraldine, Spiby, Helen, Aistrop, Dipti, Melhuish, Edward, Kim, Sung Wook, and Elbourne, Diana
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RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,POSTNATAL care ,CHILD abuse ,MATERNAL age ,EARLY medical intervention ,PREVENTION of child abuse ,CHILD abuse & psychology ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COST effectiveness ,FAMILY nursing ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care costs ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MOTHERHOOD ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,PARENTING ,QUALITY of life ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SUPPORT groups ,TIME ,EVALUATION research ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,QUALITY-adjusted life years ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: Child maltreatment is a significant public health problem. Group Family Nurse Partnership (gFNP) is a new intervention for young, expectant mothers implemented successfully in pilot studies. This study was designed to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of gFNP in reducing risk factors for maltreatment with a potentially vulnerable population.Methods: A multi-site, randomized controlled, parallel-arm trial and prospective economic evaluation was conducted, with allocation via remote randomization (minimization by site, maternal age group) to gFNP or usual care. Participants were expectant mothers aged below 20 years with at least one live birth, or aged 20-24 years with no live births and with low educational qualifications. Data from maternal interviews at baseline and when infants were 2, 6 and 12 months, and video-recording at 12 months, were collected by researchers blind to allocation. Cost information came from weekly logs completed by gFNP family nurses and other service delivery data reported by participants. Primary outcomes measured at 12 months were parenting attitudes (Adult-Adolescent Parenting Index, AAPI-2) and maternal sensitivity (CARE Index). The economic evaluation was conducted from a UK NHS and personal social services perspective with cost-effectiveness expressed in terms of incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained. The main analyses were intention-to-treat with additional complier average causal effects (CACE) analyses.Results: Between August 2013 and September 2014, 492 names of potential participants were received of whom 319 were eligible and 166 agreed to take part, 99 randomly assigned to receive gFNP and 67 to usual care. There were no between-arm differences in AAPI-2 total (7 · 5/10 in both, SE 0.1), difference adjusted for baseline, site and maternal age group 0 · 06 (95% CI - 0 · 15 to 0 · 28, p = 0 · 59) or CARE Index (intervention 4 · 0 (SE 0 · 3); control 4 · 7 (SE 0 · 4); difference adjusted for site and maternal age group - 0 · 68 (95% CI - 1 · 62 to 0 · 16, p = 0 · 25) scores. The probability that gFNP is cost-effective based on the QALY measure did not exceed 3%.Conclusions: The trial did not support gFNP as a means of reducing the risk of child maltreatment in this population but slow recruitment adversely affected group size and consequently delivery of the intervention.Trial Registration: ISRCTN78814904 . Registered on 17 May 2013. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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5. The long-term role of the home learning environment in shaping students’ academic attainment in secondary school.
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Sammons, Pam, Toth, Katalin, Sylva, Kathy, Melhuish, Edward, Siraj, Iram, and Taggart, Brenda
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ACADEMIC achievement ,STATISTICAL correlation ,CURRICULUM ,ETHNIC groups ,PSYCHOLOGY of high school students ,HIGH schools ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,SCHOOL environment ,HOME environment ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,STATISTICAL models ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the relationships between the characteristics of the home learning environment (HLE) and students’ academic attainments in secondary school in England at age 14 and 16. Design/methodology/approach – This research study uses multilevel statistical models to investigate the strength and significance of relationships between various measures of the HLE at ages three, six, 11 and 14, and students’ academic attainment in secondary school. Findings – Multilevel models show that early years HLE and specific dimensions of later HLE are positive predictors of students’ later academic attainment at age 14 and 16, when the influence of various individual, family and neighbourhood characteristics are controlled. Originality/value – The paper presents unique findings on the role of the HLE in shaping students’ academic success at secondary school, including a range of measures of the HLE obtained at different ages. The results show that the early years HLE measured at age three continues to show effects on later attainment, over and beyond the effects of later HLE and other significant influences such as family socio-economic status and parents’ qualification levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. Interactive effects of early and recent exposure to stressful contexts on cortisol reactivity in middle childhood.
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Jaffee, Sara R., McFarquhar, Tara, Stevens, Suzanne, Ouellet‐Morin, Isabelle, Melhuish, Edward, and Belsky, Jay
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SALIVA analysis ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHILD development ,HYDROCORTISONE ,INTERVIEWING ,PARENTING ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-evaluation ,T-test (Statistics) ,MATHEMATICAL variables ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background Given mixed findings as to whether stressful experiences and relationships are associated with increases or decreases in children's cortisol reactivity, we tested whether a child's developmental history of risk exposure explained variation in cortisol reactivity to an experimentally induced task. We also tested whether the relationship between cortisol reactivity and children's internalizing and externalizing problems varied as a function of their developmental history of stressful experiences and relationships. Method Participants included 400 children ( M = 9.99 years, SD = 0.74 years) from the Children's Experiences and Development Study. Early risk exposure was measured by children's experiences of harsh, nonresponsive parenting at 3 years. Recent risk exposure was measured by children's exposure to traumatic events in the past year. Children's cortisol reactivity was measured in response to a social provocation task and parents and teachers described children's internalizing and externalizing problems. Results The effect of recent exposure to traumatic events was partially dependent upon a child's early experiences of harsh, nonresponsive parenting: the more traumatic events children had recently experienced, the greater their cortisol reactivity if they had experienced lower (but not higher) levels of harsh, nonresponsive parenting at age 3. The lowest levels of cortisol reactivity were observed among children who had experienced the most traumatic events in the past year and higher (vs. lower) levels of harsh, nonresponsive parenting in early childhood. Among youth who experienced harsh, nonresponsive parent-child relationships in early childhood and later traumatic events, lower levels of cortisol reactivity were associated with higher levels of internalizing and externalizing problems. Conclusions Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal ( HPA) axis reactivity to psychological stressors and the relationship between HPA axis reactivity and children's internalizing and externalizing problems vary as a function of a child's developmental history of exposure to stressful relationships and experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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7. Aspirations, education and inequality in England: insights from the Effective Provision of Pre-school, Primary and Secondary Education Project.
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Baker, Will, Sammons, Pam, Siraj-Blatchford, Iram, Sylva, Kathy, Melhuish, Edward C., and Taggart, Brenda
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STUDENT aspirations ,STUDENT attitudes ,EDUCATIONAL equalization ,SOCIAL mobility ,EDUCATION policy ,EDUCATION ,EQUALITY ,SOCIAL conditions in Great Britain ,BRITISH politics & government, 2007- ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
Educational and occupational aspirations have become an important reference point in policy debates about educational inequality. Low aspirations are presented as a major barrier to closing educational attainment gaps and increasing levels of social mobility. Our paper contributes to this on-going debate by presenting data on the educational aspirations of students from the Effective Provision of Pre-School, Primary and Secondary Education Project in England. We analyse factors that help predict students holding high aspirations. Our findings reveal generally high aspirations across all students but also differences by income group and other background factors. We evaluate the significance of these findings for the existing literature and public policy discussions about the importance of raising educational aspirations. In particular, we question the way in which low aspirations are framed by policy-makers as a major problem in debates around educational inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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8. Pre-school quality and educational outcomes at age 11: Low quality has little benefit.
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Sylva, Kathy, Melhuish, Edward, Sammons, Pam, Siraj-Blatchford, Iram, and Taggart, Brenda
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EDUCATIONAL quality ,PRESCHOOL education ,COGNITION in children ,CHILD psychology ,CHILD behavior - Abstract
This article reports the effects of pre-school quality on children’s cognitive and behavioural outcomes at age 11 using a large-scale longitudinal study of 3000+ children in England (EPPE/EPPSE). The ECERS-R and a curricular extension to it (ECERS-E) were used to assess the quality of provision in 141 pre-school settings attended by the children. The quality measures were derived from observations throughout the day of interactions and resources related to Literacy, Numeracy and Science learning, as well as observational/ interview data related to how each centre catered to diverse needs of children. Multi-level modelling was used to investigate the effects of pre-school quality on children’s academic and social-behavioural outcomes at age 11. Pre-school quality significantly predicted most outcomes, after taking account of key child and family factors. More importantly, children who attended low quality pre-schools had cognitive and behavioural scores that were not significantly different from those of children with no pre-school experience.The methods and findings of this large-scale study are considered in terms of the strengths and limitations of ‘educational effectiveness’ designs. It is suggested that mixed methods designs can address many of the limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
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9. The influence of child, family, home factors and pre-school education on the identification of special educational needs at age 10.
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Anders, Yvonne, Sammons, Pam, Taggart, Brenda, Sylva, Kathy, Melhuish, Edward, and Siraj‐Blatchford, Iram
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SPECIAL needs students ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,CHILDREN with learning disabilities ,DIAGNOSIS of learning disabilities ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PRESCHOOL education - Abstract
The early identification of young children's special educational needs (SEN), as well as the development of specific strategies to support those children identified with special needs, are increasingly recognised as crucial to facilitating good adjustment to school and to ensuring that such children are helped to reach their full potential in education. Using a large national sample of young children in England whose developmental progress was followed up from pre-school, this study investigates which child, family, home and pre-school factors can be viewed as risk or protective factors for later SEN-status at age 10. The experience of high-quality pre-school education is shown to reduce the likelihood of a child being identified as experiencing SEN in the long run. Teachers' assessments of SEN are found to be strongly related to children's reading and mathematics attainment, but other factors also predict SEN, including a child's age within a year group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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10. Effects of fully-established Sure Start Local Programmes on 3-year-old children and their families living in England: a quasi-experimental observational study.
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Melhuish, Edward, Belsky, Jay, Leyland, Alastair H., and Barnes, Jacqueline
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MEDICAL research , *CHILDREN'S health , *SOCIAL work with children , *CHILD welfare , *HEALTH policy - Abstract
The article presents an observational study which examines the effects of fully-established Sure Start Local Programmes (SSLP) on three year old children and their families living in England. Three year old children and their families from disadvantaged Sure Start Local Programmes (SSLPs) were compared with those from similarly deprived areas in England who took part in the Millenium Cohort Study. 14 outcomes were studied including children's immunisations, accidents, language development, and positive and negative social behaviours. Researchers found that beneficial effects were associated with five of 14 outcomes. They concluded that children and families benefited from living in SSLP areas.
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- 2008
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11. Changing models of research to inform educational policy.
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Sylva, Kathy, Taggart, Brenda, Melhuish, Edward, Sammons, Pam, and Siraj-Blatchford, Iram
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EDUCATION policy ,BRITISH education system ,EDUCATION research ,KNOWLEDGE management ,PRIMARY education ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This contribution explores changes in the way that educational researchers engage with policy-makers in England. The traditional relationship between research and policy was linear, with funders supporting the efforts of researchers, who carried out research and then disseminated it to those responsible for shaping and implementing policy. This model of 'knowledge transfer' is fast being supplemented and sometimes replaced by one of 'knowledge exchange' as policy-makers participate in new forms of research. 'Knowledge exchange' consists of collaborative problem-solving between researchers and decision-makers that happens through linkage and exchange. This contribution uses one large-scale English study to illustrate the new relationship between research and policy. The Effective Pre-school and Primary Education (EPPE) project is a longitudinal study of the effects of pre- and primary school on the academic and social development of more than 3,000 children in England. The study's findings have been used as part of the 'evidence base' for UK policy on universal pre-school provision as well as targeted services in disadvantaged communities, for example, Sure Start and Children's Centres. From the earliest days of the study researchers worked in partnership with policy-makers. Although the overall design was agreed at contract-stage, major modifications to sampling, assessments, and analyses were made as the study progressed. The researcher/policy-maker engagement continued throughout the study and consisted of sustained interaction, shared decision-making and mutual respect. Supportive organisational structures allowed two-way exchange and decision-making. Although the researchers were responsible for scientific integrity in all phases, there was shared ownership of the findings with regular and collaborative review and amendment to suit emerging policy needs. The EPPE project was one of the first in the UK to work interactively with Government partners in the shaping of both 'research' and 'policy' outputs. This partnership enabled the research to have a significant impact on UK policy. The contribution concludes with discussion of how the Furlong and Oancea 'quality assessment framework' can be applied to research based on policy partnerships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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12. Neighbourhood deprivation, school disorder and academic achievement in primary schools in deprived communities in England.
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Barnes, Jacqueline, Belsky, Jay, Broomfield, Kate A., and Melhuish, Edward
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EDUCATION ,SOCIAL groups ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,SPECIAL education ,VIOLENCE ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,SCHOOL food ,SCHOOL size - Abstract
There is growing concern about violent behaviour in schools, involving students, staff and/or parents. A survey of 1777 primary schools (for children aged 5 to 11) throughout England, most in areas of social and economic deprivation, found more disorder in neighbourhoods with greater deprivation. More disorder was also observed when there was more school-level disadvantage (e.g. students receiving free meals), larger school size and more children in need of special education services. Despite difficulties in drawing causal inferences from correlational data, the fact that more disorder significantly predicted lower school achievement for students at 7 and 11 in standardized English, mathematics and science assessments even once school characteristics and neighbourhood deprivation were taken into account is judged noteworthy. Potential confounding factors are considered in the discussion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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13. Educational Progress of Looked- After Children in England: A Study Using Group Trajectory Analysis.
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Sutcliffe, Alastair G., Gardiner, Julian, and Melhuish, Edward
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ACADEMIC achievement evaluation , *CHILD care , *TIME - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Looked-after children in local authority care are among the most disadvantaged, and measures of their well-being, including educational outcomes, are poorer than other children's. METHODS: The study sample consisted of all children in England born in academic years 1993 to 1994 through 1997 to 1998 who were in local authority care at any point during the academic years 2005 to 2006 through 2012 to 2013 and for whom results of national tests in literacy and numeracy were available at ages 7, 11, and 16 (N = 47 500). RESULTS: Group trajectory analysis of children's educational progress identified 5 trajectory groups: low achievement, late improvement, late decline, predominant, and high achievement. Being looked after earlier was associated with a higher probability of following a high achievement trajectory and a lower probability of following a late decline trajectory. For children first looked after between ages 7 and 16, having a longer total time looked after by age 16 was associated with a higher probability of following a high achievement trajectory. For children with poor outcomes at ages 7 and 11, being looked after by age 16 was associated with an increased chance of educational improvement by age 16. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides evidence that early entry into care can reduce the risk of poor educational outcomes. It also establishes group trajectory analysis as an effective method for analyzing the educational progress of looked-after children, with the particular strength that it allows factors associated with a late decline or improvement in educational progress to be identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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14. Sure start in England.
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Belsky, Jay, Leyland, Alastair, Barnes, Jacqueline, and Melhuish, Edward
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LETTERS to the editor , *CHILD services , *CHILD welfare , *EARLY intervention (Education) - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented in response to the article "Sure Start Local Programmes in England," by P. Kane.
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- 2009
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15. The impact of early-years provision in Children's Centres (EPICC) on child cognitive and socio-emotional development: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial.
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Murray L, Jennings S, Mortimer A, Prout A, Melhuish E, Hughes C, Duncan J, Holmes J, Dishington C, and Cooper PJ
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- Age Factors, Attention, Books, Child Language, Child, Preschool, England, Executive Function, Female, Humans, Male, Parent-Child Relations, Reading, Research Design, Time Factors, Child Behavior, Child Day Care Centers, Child Development, Cognition, Early Intervention, Educational methods, Education, Nonprofessional methods, Emotions, Parents psychology, Social Behavior
- Abstract
Background: There are marked disparities between pre-school children in key skills affecting school readiness, disparities that commonly persist and influence children's later academic achievements, employment, and adjustment. Much of this disparity is linked to socio-economic disadvantage and its impact on the home learning environment. Children's Centres are an ideal context in which to implement and evaluate programmes to address this problem. They principally serve the 30% worst areas on the Indices of Deprivation Affecting Children, providing for families from the antenatal period up to age 5 years, aiming to promote parenting skills and provide care for children., Methods: We are conducting a randomised controlled trial, based in Children Centres, to evaluate a parenting intervention for caregivers of children between 28 and 45 months of age. The intervention provides training to parents in dialogic book-sharing. The training is run by a facilitator who sees parents in small groups, on a weekly basis over 7 weeks. The study is a cluster randomised controlled trial. Twelve of the Children's Centres in the town of Reading in the UK have been randomly assigned to an index or control condition. The primary outcome is child cognition (language, attention, and executive function); and secondary outcomes are child social development, behaviour problems, and emotion regulation, parenting during book-sharing and problem solving and parental child behaviour management strategies. Data are collected at baseline, post-intervention and 4-6 months post-intervention., Discussion: The Impact of Early-years Provision in Children's Centres trial (EPICC) aims to evaluate the impact of an early parenting intervention on several key risk factors for compromised child development, including aspects of parenting and child cognition, social development, behaviour problems and emotion regulation. The study is being carried out in Children's Centres, which largely serve the most disadvantaged families in the UK. Since the intervention is brief and, with modest levels of training, readily deliverable within Children's Centres and similar early childcare provision centres, demonstration that it is of benefit to child cognition, socio-emotional development and behaviour would be important., Trial Registration: ISRCTN Registry, ISRCTN28513611 . Registered on 28 March 2017. This is version 1 of the protocol for the EPICC trial.
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- 2018
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16. First steps: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial of the effectiveness of the Group Family Nurse Partnership (gFNP) program compared to routine care in improving outcomes for high-risk mothers and their children and preventing abuse.
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Barnes J, Aistrop D, Allen E, Barlow J, Elbourne D, Macdonald G, Melhuish E, Petrou S, Pink J, Snowdon C, Spiby H, Stuart J, and Sturgess J
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Child Abuse psychology, Clinical Protocols, Educational Status, England, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Maternal Age, Maternal Behavior, Mother-Child Relations, Parenting, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Pregnancy, Program Evaluation, Quality of Life, Research Design, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Social Support, Stress, Psychological diagnosis, Stress, Psychological psychology, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Video Recording, Young Adult, Child Abuse prevention & control, Family Nursing, Group Processes, Mothers psychology, Preventive Health Services methods
- Abstract
Background: Evidence from the USA suggests that the home-based Family Nurse Partnership program (FNP), extending from early pregnancy until infants are 24 months, can reduce the risk of child abuse and neglect throughout childhood. FNP is now widely available in the UK. A new variant, Group Family Nurse Partnership (gFNP) offers similar content but in a group context and for a shorter time, until infants are 12 months old. Each group comprises 8 to 12 women with similar expected delivery dates and their partners. Its implementation has been established but there is no evidence of its effectiveness., Methods/design: The study comprises a multi-site randomized controlled trial designed to identify the benefits of gFNP compared to standard care. Participants (not eligible for FNP) must be either aged < 20 years at their last menstrual period (LMP) with one or more previous live births, or aged 20 to 24 at LMP with low educational qualifications and no previous live births. 'Low educational qualifications' is defined as not having both Maths and English Language GCSE at grade C or higher or, if they have both, no more than four in total at grade C or higher. Exclusions are: under 20 years and previously received home-based FNP and, in either age group, severe psychotic mental illness or not able to communicate in English. Consenting women are randomly allocated (minimized by site and maternal age group) when between 10 and 16 weeks pregnant to either to the 44 session gFNP program or to standard care after the collection of baseline information. Researchers are blind to group assignment.The primary outcomes at 12 months are child abuse potential based on the revised Adult-Adolescent Parenting Inventory and parent/infant interaction coded using the CARE Index based on a video-taped interaction. Secondary outcomes are maternal depression, parenting stress, health related quality of life, social support, and use of services., Discussion: This is the first study of the effectiveness of gFNP in the UK. Results should inform decision-making about its delivery alongside universal services, potentially enabling a wider range of families to benefit from the FNP curriculum and approach to supporting parenting., Trial Registration: ISRCTN78814904.
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- 2013
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17. Neighborhood characteristics and mental health: the relevance for mothers of infants in deprived English neighborhoods.
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Barnes J, Belsky J, Frost M, and Melhuish E
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- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Anxiety, Depression, England, Female, Humans, Infant, Mother-Child Relations, Safety, State Medicine, Child Development, Mental Disorders etiology, Poverty Areas, Residence Characteristics classification, Social Environment
- Abstract
Purpose: Neighborhood features have been linked with adult mental-health problems, particularly depression. A recent comprehensive review indicated structural neighborhood features derived from data sources such as the census may be less important predictors of mental health problems than social processes but that most studies lack multiple neighborhood measures. The aim of the study is to investigate relations between multiple neighborhood factors (observations, interviewer ratings, UK Census data) and maternal mental-health problems., Methods: 14,700 mothers with 9-month-old infants living in 195 deprived neighborhoods in England were interviewed, neighborhoods were observed and census data on employment, ethnic background and housing tenancy utilized., Results: Lower (interviewer-rated) neighborhood quality and lower neighborhood prosperity predicted more mother-reported mental-health problems net of family-level predictors. Contrary to expectations detailed observations did not contribute additionally., Conclusions: Neighborhood conditions, though not as important as family factors and maternal characteristics, are sufficiently important to consider when planning mental health services; they can be assessed at relatively low cost by census data or professionals' ratings.
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- 2011
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18. The early years. Preschool influences on mathematics achievement.
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Melhuish EC, Sylva K, Sammons P, Siraj-Blatchford I, Taggart B, Phan MB, and Malin A
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- Child Day Care Centers, Child, Preschool, England, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Education, Educational Status, Mathematics, Schools, Nursery
- Published
- 2008
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19. Variation in community intervention programmes and consequences for children and families: the example of Sure Start Local Programmes.
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Melhuish E, Belsky J, Anning A, Ball M, Barnes J, Romaniuk H, and Leyland A
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- Child, Preschool, Comprehensive Health Care, Education, England, Female, Health Plan Implementation, Humans, Infant, Male, Program Evaluation, Risk Factors, Community Health Services, Early Intervention, Educational, Psychosocial Deprivation, Social Behavior, Socialization
- Abstract
Background: An area-based initiative, Sure Start Local Programmes (SSLPs), was established by the UK government to reduce social exclusion through improving the well-being of children aged 0-3 years and their families in disadvantaged communities; a true community intervention in that all children under four and their families in specified areas served as targets of universal services. A national evaluation examined the links between variation in programme implementation and effectiveness., Methods: Data gathered from multiple sources produced measures of implementation in terms of proficiency, services and staffing. Measures of programme impact on child/parenting outcomes derived from multilevel models, controlling for child, family and area characteristics, were identified to demonstrate programme effectiveness., Results: Some modest linkage between programme implementation (e.g., proficiency, empowerment of parents and staff, identification of users) and effectiveness for child and parenting outcomes., Conclusions: Overall proficiency and specific aspects of implementation may influence effectiveness, which should guide the design of other child, family and community services.
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- 2007
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20. Effects of Sure Start local programmes on children and families: early findings from a quasi-experimental, cross sectional study.
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Belsky J, Melhuish E, Barnes J, Leyland AH, and Romaniuk H
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- Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Early Intervention, Educational, England, Family Health, Humans, Infant, Language Development, Mothers statistics & numerical data, Phonetics, Poverty Areas, Program Evaluation, Child Development, Child Health Services standards, Child Welfare, Community Health Services standards
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effects of Sure Start local programmes (SSLPs) on children and their families. To assess whether variations in the effectiveness of SSLPs are due to differences in implementation., Design: Quasi-experimental cross sectional study using interviews with mothers and cognitive assessment of children aged 36 months who speak English., Setting: Socially deprived communities in England: 150 communities with ongoing SSLPs and 50 comparison communities., Participants: Mothers of 12,575 children aged 9 months and 3927 children aged 36 months in SSLP areas; mothers of 1509 children aged 9 months and 1101 children aged 36 months in comparison communities., Outcome Measures: Mothers' reports of community services and local area, family functioning and parenting skills, child health and development, and verbal ability at 36 months., Results: Differences between SSLP areas and comparison areas were limited, small, and varied by degree of social deprivation. SSLPs had beneficial effects on non-teenage mothers (better parenting, better social functioning in children) and adverse effects on children of teenage mothers (poorer social functioning) and children of single parents or parents who did not work (lower verbal ability). SSLPs led by health services were slightly more effective than other SSLPs., Conclusion: SSLPs seem to benefit relatively less socially deprived parents (who have greater personal resources) and their children but seem to have an adverse effect on the most disadvantaged children. Programmes led by health services seem to be more effective than programmes led by other agencies.
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- 2006
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21. Disadvantaged but different: variation among deprived communities in relation to child and family well-being.
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Barnes J, Belsky J, Broomfield KA, Dave S, Frost M, and Melhuish E
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Child Welfare, Child, Preschool, England, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Minority Groups psychology, Needs Assessment, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Poverty psychology, Social Environment, Social Problems classification, Social Problems psychology, Social Support, Socioeconomic Factors, Early Intervention, Educational, Family Relations, Psychosocial Deprivation, Quality of Life psychology, Social Welfare psychology
- Abstract
Background: Disadvantaged communities are increasingly the target for interventions. Sure Start was launched in England in 1999 to tackle child poverty and improve child and family services, with Sure Start Local Programmes (SSLPs) targeted at relatively small areas of marked deprivation. However, they are located in a range of different types of communities where they may provide services to very different resident populations. They are all disadvantaged but underlying that label there are specific patterns of variability, relevant for service provision. To evaluate the implementation, impact, and cost-effectiveness of SSLPs, or other area-based initiatives, it is important to consider ways in which they can be grouped meaningfully according to these patterns., Method: Data were collected from administrative databases to describe SSLPs in terms of demography, deprivation, and aspects of child and family functioning and grouped using cluster analysis., Results: Five different 'types' of SSLP community were identified, based on their socio-demographic and economic characteristics; typified by more, less or average deprivation in relation to all SSLPs, and in terms of the proportion of ethnic minority families resident in the areas. The groups differ in terms of community measures of child health, educational attainment, school disorder and child welfare and their prediction from demographic community characteristics., Conclusions: The groupings have implications for service delivery and the evaluation of area-based initiatives.
- Published
- 2005
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