Chicago: Girls whose mothers were visited at home by nurses during pregnancy
and the childrens infancy appear less likely to enter the criminal justice system by
age 19, according to a report in the January issue of Archives of Pediatrics &
Adolescent Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Preventive interventions for parents of young children that improve parental
competencies and the early learning environment of the child hold considerable
promise as a means of reducing health and developmental problems across the
life course and associated costs to government and society, the authors write as
background information in the article. Home visitation services that focus on
promoting a mothers health and teaching caregiving skills during pregnancy and
infancy have received attention recently but have not been assessed over the long
term.
John Eckenrode, Ph.D., of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., and colleagues studied
310 19-year-olds whose mothers were enrolled in the Nurse-Family Partnership
program in Elmira, N.Y., in which nurses visited homes to help women improve
health-related behaviors during pregnancy, provide more competent care during
infancy and improve their economic self-sufficiency through appropriate life
choices. A total of 400 pregnant women enrolled in the study between 1978 and
1980; 85 percent of them were age 19 or younger, unmarried or from households
with low socioeconomic status.
Of the 310 families followed up when the children were 19 years of age, 140 were
in the control group, 79 received visits during pregnancy only and 91 received visits
during pregnancy and infancy. Families in the program received an average of nine
home visits by nurses during pregnancy and 23 from birth through the childs
second birthday.
Compared with the 73 in the comparison group, the 44 girls whose families were
visited during pregnancy and infancy were less likely to have been arrested by age
19 (10 percent vs. 30 percent) or convicted (4 percent vs. 20 percent), and had
fewer lifetime arrests (an average of 0.1 vs. 0.54) and convictions (0.04 percent vs.
0.37 percent). When the analysis was restricted to girls whose mothers were high-
risk (unmarried or low-income), those who were visited by nurses had fewer
children (11 percent vs. 30 percent) and were less likely to use Medicaid (18
percent vs. 45 percent) than those who were not visited.
For boys, the likelihood of an arrest increased significantly in both the intervention
and control groups after age 12, with no difference in arrests between groups
through age 19.
Overall, these findings suggest that the Nurse-Family Partnership program has the
potential to produce lasting changes in criminal offending trajectories, early
childbearing and economic outcomes for girls born to low-resource mothers, the
authors write. Given that other long-term follow-up studies of model early-childhood
interventions for infants and preschoolers have reported continued treatment
effects with older adolescents and young adults, the impact of well-designed and
implemented early interventions on crime reduction is promising.
These findings also emphasize the need to direct more scientific attention to girls
in observational and interventional research on criminal behavior and delinquency,
they conclude.
Contact: Joel Schwarz
206-543-2580
joels@u.washington.edu.
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