The Halls Creek Community Families Program: Elements of the role of the child health nurse in development of a remote Aboriginal home visiting peer support program for families in the early years

Objective: To undertake an evaluation of elements of the role of the child health nurse in the development of peer support for Aboriginal families with young children in a remote setting. Design: The Halls Creek Community Families Program uses expertise of peer support workers to support parents of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Munns, Ailsa, Walker, R.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16319
_version_ 1848749141633531904
author Munns, Ailsa
Walker, R.
author_facet Munns, Ailsa
Walker, R.
author_sort Munns, Ailsa
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objective: To undertake an evaluation of elements of the role of the child health nurse in the development of peer support for Aboriginal families with young children in a remote setting. Design: The Halls Creek Community Families Program uses expertise of peer support workers to support parents of young families. In stage one, participatory action research was used. The program facilitator, who was a child health nurse, undertook action learning sets where issues were explored relating to home visiting strategies to families. Additionally, the facilitator maintained a reflective practice diary. Outcomes contributed to stage two, where an independent researcher evaluated program changes. This report relates to stage one, which used descriptive qualitative data from interviews with peer support workers and community support agencies, and the facilitator's reflective diary. Data were analysed by thematic analysis, focusing on elements of the role of the facilitator in program development. Setting: A remote Aboriginal community in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. Participants: Eight peer support workers and five health and welfare professionals from community support agencies. Main outcome measures: This study measures changes in participants' understanding of the role and scope of practice of the child health nurse facilitator, thereby supporting improved support for Aboriginal families with young children. Results: Thematic analysis identified three major changes in understanding the child health nurse facilitator role: working in partnership, communication strategies and education and organisational strategies.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:16:13Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-16319
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:16:13Z
publishDate 2015
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-163192019-02-19T05:34:54Z The Halls Creek Community Families Program: Elements of the role of the child health nurse in development of a remote Aboriginal home visiting peer support program for families in the early years Munns, Ailsa Walker, R. Objective: To undertake an evaluation of elements of the role of the child health nurse in the development of peer support for Aboriginal families with young children in a remote setting. Design: The Halls Creek Community Families Program uses expertise of peer support workers to support parents of young families. In stage one, participatory action research was used. The program facilitator, who was a child health nurse, undertook action learning sets where issues were explored relating to home visiting strategies to families. Additionally, the facilitator maintained a reflective practice diary. Outcomes contributed to stage two, where an independent researcher evaluated program changes. This report relates to stage one, which used descriptive qualitative data from interviews with peer support workers and community support agencies, and the facilitator's reflective diary. Data were analysed by thematic analysis, focusing on elements of the role of the facilitator in program development. Setting: A remote Aboriginal community in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. Participants: Eight peer support workers and five health and welfare professionals from community support agencies. Main outcome measures: This study measures changes in participants' understanding of the role and scope of practice of the child health nurse facilitator, thereby supporting improved support for Aboriginal families with young children. Results: Thematic analysis identified three major changes in understanding the child health nurse facilitator role: working in partnership, communication strategies and education and organisational strategies. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16319 10.1111/ajr.12225 fulltext
spellingShingle Munns, Ailsa
Walker, R.
The Halls Creek Community Families Program: Elements of the role of the child health nurse in development of a remote Aboriginal home visiting peer support program for families in the early years
title The Halls Creek Community Families Program: Elements of the role of the child health nurse in development of a remote Aboriginal home visiting peer support program for families in the early years
title_full The Halls Creek Community Families Program: Elements of the role of the child health nurse in development of a remote Aboriginal home visiting peer support program for families in the early years
title_fullStr The Halls Creek Community Families Program: Elements of the role of the child health nurse in development of a remote Aboriginal home visiting peer support program for families in the early years
title_full_unstemmed The Halls Creek Community Families Program: Elements of the role of the child health nurse in development of a remote Aboriginal home visiting peer support program for families in the early years
title_short The Halls Creek Community Families Program: Elements of the role of the child health nurse in development of a remote Aboriginal home visiting peer support program for families in the early years
title_sort halls creek community families program: elements of the role of the child health nurse in development of a remote aboriginal home visiting peer support program for families in the early years
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16319