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Rev. salud pública ; 12(2): 184-196, abr. 2010.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-560847

ABSTRACT

Se revisaron artículos publicados entre 1999 y 2009, en revistas indexadas en PubMED, EBSCO y ProQuest, sobre las características, efectividad y desafíos de los programas de visita domiciliaria orientados a la intervención en infancia temprana, clarificando los alcances y limitaciones de la investigación y sus ámbitos de aplicación. La visita domiciliaria se ha mostrado efectiva para una variedad de áreas relevantes, especialmente sobre el desarrollo de competencias parentales y la relación cuidadorinfante. En términos generales, los programas más efectivos comenzaban en el embarazo, duraban más de un año, contaban con personal especialmente entrenado y se focalizaban en construir una relación de confianza y en modelar la interacción cuidador-infante. Se identificó la importancia de considerar en su diseño las características de la población objetivo, del modelo de visita usado y del agente visitador. A pesar de la evidencia acumulada en estudios anglosajones, los costos asociados a estos programas pueden ser muy altos, implicando barreras que pueden hacer dificultosa su diseminación en los países latinoamericanos. Los autores plantean la necesidad de desarrollar y evaluar otras variantes (por ejemplo, incorporando monitoras comunitarias), ponderando su relación costo/efectividad.


The authors reviewed papers published between 1999 and 2009 in journals indexed in PsycInfo, PubMED, EBSCO and ProQuest concerning the characteristics, effectiveness and challenges of home visit programmes orientated towards early childhood intervention, clarifying the research's scope and limitations and its applications. Home visiting has been shown to be effective for a variety of relevant areas, especially for developing parent skills and child-caregiver relationships. The most effective programmes have started at pregnancy, lasted more than a year, had specially trained staff and have focused on building a trustworthy relationship and on modelling the infant-caregiver interaction. The importance of considering target population characteristics, the visiting model used and the visitor agent was identified in designing these programmes. In spite of the evidence accumulated in Anglo-Saxon studies, the costs associated with these programmes can be very high, thereby implying barriers which can make their dissemination difficult in Latin-American countries. The authors discuss the need for developing and evaluating other variants (i.e. including community agents), considering their cost/effectiveness ratio for treating early childhood problems, needs and characteristics in Latin-America.


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Pregnancy , Early Intervention, Educational/methods , House Calls , Child Abuse/prevention & control , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Developmental Disabilities/prevention & control , Early Intervention, Educational/economics , Early Intervention, Educational/organization & administration , Early Intervention, Educational/statistics & numerical data , Health Personnel , House Calls/economics , House Calls/statistics & numerical data , Meta-Analysis as Topic , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Peer Group , Pregnancy in Adolescence , Program Evaluation
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