Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

What do Parent’s Want? An Exploratory assessment of the parenting needs and desires of parents with children 0-6 years residing in the Calgary Health Region.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "What do Parent’s Want? An Exploratory assessment of the parenting needs and desires of parents with children 0-6 years residing in the Calgary Health Region."— Presentation transcript:

1 What do Parent’s Want? An Exploratory assessment of the parenting needs and desires of parents with children 0-6 years residing in the Calgary Health Region September 29, 2008 Tara Duhaney Health Promotion Coordinator, 3 Cheers

2 Context and Background  In 2007, 3 Cheers Parenting Initiatives Committee commissioned:  a review of the literature that would identify evidence-based programs and/or strategies that, if implemented, would increase the initiative's ability to address and support improved capacity for healthy parenting practices; and  an environmental scan that would identify present and future factors that might influence the direction and goals of the 3 Cheers Parenting Initiative Committee's actions towards improving the capacity for healthy parenting practices.

3 Environmental Scan Findings  Notable findings revealed that:  Decisions around program planning for parents are often made with limited knowledge or consideration for the actual needs and desires of the population being served  Few parenting programs have undergone formal or rigorous evaluation in Canada  While Calgary has a wide range of programs/services that support parents and families, most are targeted programs and not necessarily perceived as being available or accessible to all parents  There is a lack of information about the actual needs and desires of parents in the Calgary region (and Canada) with respect to parenting To this end…

4 Report Recommendations  Recommendation 4: “ a comprehensive, population level, community- based parental needs assessment should be undertaken to determine the specific parenting- related needs of parents residing within the Calgary region who have children aged 0 to 6 years ”

5 Significance and Relevance  The first population-level, community-based study examining parents’ parenting needs and barriers with parents themselves  Findings will build on local, provincial, and national research, including:  Early Years Study II, 2007  Dr. Wendy Lamont – Parenting Lit Review and Environmental Scan  Invest In Kids National Surveys and Research  ACCFCR: What We Know About Child Development: A Provincial Benchmark Survey, 2007  ACCFCR: What We Know About Child Development: A Provincial Benchmark Survey – 3 Cheers Report - 2008  3 Cheers Evaluations (Howard Research, DSRT)  Healthy Attachment: An Overview and Environmental Scan, 2007

6 What is the purpose of the PNA? Goal:  To inform future strategies for promoting healthy parenting in the Calgary Health Region Objectives:  To identify the information and delivery needs of parents and caregivers with children 0-6 in the CHR  To identify ways to increase the accessibility and cultural relevance of parenting information and supports to specific parent populations  To improve professional service delivery of appropriate parenting supports and services by disseminating key findings about parents’ needs

7 What do we want to know? 1.What are the concerns, issues and barriers to accessing/utilizing parenting support services 2.What are the specific needs and interests of parents with children 0-6 years residing in the CHR? 3.What are the gaps in information and program delivery 4.How do parents want to receive parenting information/supports?

8 How is the information being gathered?  Phase 1: Parent Focus Groups (Aug-Sept 2008)  Parent Sub-groups Immigrant parents Aboriginal parents (N=5) Rural parents Urban parents (N=10)  Phase 2: Mai l Questionnaire (Oct.-Dec. 2008)  Representative sample (N-1060) of parents selected from known lists of parents who attend immunization visits within the CHR  Questions designed to elicit: Parents’ information/support needs Preferred method/format of receiving parenting education/support Barriers to accessing/utilizing parenting information/help How needs/barriers differ between and among different sub-groups of parents (i.e., moms vs. dads; working vs. stay-at-home; rural vs. urban)

9 Phase 1: Preliminary Themes  Parents want and value both formal and informal supports:  Better post-partum care/follow-up  Programs /resources/supports for fathers,  Licensed child care  Parent programs run by a qualified health professional  Timely access to information (e.g., Health Link)  Coordinated and consistent information  Topics/issues on which parents would like additional information or support included  Developmental milestones, feeding, sleep, car seats  Parenting beyond first year  Support for fathers (during pregnancy and beyond)  Support/Information for parental coping and well-being  Acknowledgement and validation of different parenting styles  Informal sources of support (chat groups, drop-in programs)

10 Phase 1: Preliminary Themes  Challenges/barriers to accessing parenting information or help:  Programming : time, hours, cost, space, availability, format  Information overload: “I feel like a hunter”  Lack of awareness/knowledge  Lack of system/structural support : family doctors, paediatricians, maternity leave, transition back to work)  How can we respond?  Offer more support in the community  Flexible hours: evening, weekends  More collaborative, coordinated and consistent provision of information and support  Programming (formal and informal) that caters to parental well-being

11 Dissemination Plan  Formal ‘launch’ of findings  Written report and executive summary  Local and National Conferences  Community presentations

12 Questions/Comments/Feedback?


Download ppt "What do Parent’s Want? An Exploratory assessment of the parenting needs and desires of parents with children 0-6 years residing in the Calgary Health Region."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google