The Power of Stories to Inspire Change: Positive Parenting and Infant Health and Safety Promotion Using Children's Books John S. Hutton (MS) 2 MD, Assistant Professor Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Reading and Literacy Discovery Center
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The Power of Stories to Inspire Change: Positive Parenting ...€¦ · Health ill-Literacy •Affects 30-36% of US households •Negative parenting & inadequate preventive care behaviors
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The Power of Stories to Inspire Change: Positive Parenting and Infant Health and Safety Promotion Using Children's Books
John S. Hutton (MS)2 MD, Assistant Professor
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Reading and Literacy Discovery Center
Disclosures
• Dr. Hutton is the author and editor of children’s books featured in this talk, and founder of blue manatee press, their publisher.
• All proceeds from Sleep Baby Safe and Snug, featured in research mentioned in this talk, benefit the non-profit Charlie’s Kids Foundation.
• Dr. Hutton has received and currently receives no financial compensation in these roles.
Portrait of the scientist as a young man…
Pre-Test: what is this?
A) A test preparation manual
B) A nostalgic compliment to videos & apps
C) A chew toy
D) A neat thing to read if there’s time
E) A CATALYST for human engagement
Books From BirthAAP Literacy Recommendations
• Begin daily shared reading beginning as soon as possible after birth, which…
“…stimulates optimal patterns of brain development and strengthens parent-child
relationships at a critical time in child development, which, in turn, builds language, literacy, and social-emotional skills that last a
lifetime.”
High, P. C. and P. Klass (2014). "Literacy promotion: an essential component of primary care pediatric practice.”
Books From BirthAAP Literacy Recommendations
• Begin daily shared reading beginning as soon as possible after birth, which…
“…stimulates optimal patterns of brain development and strengthens parent-child
relationships at a critical time in child development, which, in turn, builds language, literacy, and social-emotional skills that last a
lifetime.”
Health Literacy
“An individual’s capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic health information needed* to
make appropriate health decisions.”
* And think it is meaningful enough...
Source: Nielsen-Bohlman L, et al, eds. In: Health Literacy: A Prescription to End Confusion. Bethesda, MD: National Academies Press; 2004.
Health ill-Literacy
• Affects 30-36% of US households
• Negative parenting & inadequate preventive care behaviors (1.4-4x)– Overutilization of acute/underutilization of preventive
– Poor adherence to treatments, immunization schedules, anticipatory guidance
– Medication dosing/formula mixing errors
– Decreased breastfeeding
– Increased smoking
– Increased injuries and infant mortality
• Highest impact in context of high need for services– Chronic illness – diabetes, asthma, special needs
– Newborn/infant care
Challenge 1: MaterialMismatch
• Average reading level of US parents ~ 7th grade
• Challenges identifying parental reading deficiencies– Social stigma
– Tend to be lower than reported educational level
– Providers overestimate patient/family literacy
• Survey of AAP education brochures– 8th-12th grade reading level
– Recommended 6th-8th grade
• Internet information often exceeds 10th grade level
2: Who remembers their favorite brochure from childhood?
“Alternate, Family-Centered
Platforms needed*…”
* AAP, CDC, NIH statements.
Paging Dr. Seuss:Children’s Books for Health
• Valued/integrated into family routines– Gift from “helpful” health care providers
• Retain information via repeated exposures
• Ease of access of information
• Emotional engagement/salience
• Applications– Health topics: Behavior, milestones, safety
– Reach Out and Read: developmental screening, cognitive & social-emotional benefits
Zuckerman, et al. 2011.Reich, et al 2010, 2011, 2012
• Leading cause of infant mortality from 1 month to 1 year of age
– SIDS (42%), ASSB (25%), unknown (31%)
• ~3500 sleep-related deaths/year in US
– Peaks between 1-3 months old
– Skewed towards low-income/minority
– Bed-sharing: major risk factor, esp younger
CDC/NCHS, National Vital Statistics System.Moon, et al. AAP Policy Statement. Pediatrics. November 2016.
SUID/SIDS Trends
SOURCE: CDC/NCHS, National Vital Statistics System 2016
39.4 deaths/100,00070% decrease
130.3 deaths/100,000
AvoidBed-sharing
AAPStatement
AAP Safe Sleep Recommendations
✓ Diligent prenatal care✓ Back to Sleep (supine) up to 1 year old✓ Exclusive crib use✓ Always use a firm sleep surface/mattress, fitted sheet ✓ No soft bedding, pads or objects in crib✓ Room sharing for at least 6 months✓ Avoid bed-sharing, esp in first 4 months✓ Exclusive breastfeeding✓ Pacifier use after breastfeeding is established✓ Avoid overheating/over-bundling✓ Avoid smoking & alcohol use✓ Keep immunizations up to date
Moon, et al. AAP Policy Statement. Pediatrics. November 2016.
• 5 customary: NICHD, AAP, ECS, MCHB, Nemours KidsHealth• Flesch-Kincaid 5th-10th grade reading level• HV discretion at each visit, generally use all 5
Setting• Home visiting, 8 community agencies
– SW Ohio + northern Kentucky
– Standardized training, curriculum
– Established research infrastructure• HV collect data and provide anticipatory guidance
• First-time, at-risk mothers:– Unmarried (89.0%), low income (86.6%),
late/no prenatal care (25.8%), under 18 (30%)
➢For this study: English-speaking, over 15 y/o
Safe sleep knowledgeSafe sleep adherence
Maternal utilityReview book
Home visitor utility
Book Brochures
~1 Week Home Visit
~2 Months Home Visit
Safe sleep knowledgeSafe sleep adherence
Maternal utilityReview brochures
Home visitor utility
Safe sleep knowledgeSafe sleep adherence
Maternal utilityReview book
Home visitor utility
Safe sleep knowledgeSafe sleep adherence
Maternal utilityReview brochures
Home visitor utility
Health Literacy (REALM) Safe sleep knowledge
Present bookHome visitor utility
Health Literacy (REALM) Safe sleep knowledge
Present brochuresHome visitor utility
3rd TrimesterHome Visit
Randomize by HV• Agency• Experience
Results
Knowledge: “Name as many things as you can think of to help keep your baby safe from SIDS.”
Hutton, et al. Academic Pediatrics, 2017.
✓ 11-item checklist
36%, 50%
7%, 9%
45%, 65%
Knowledge items
p < 0.05
• Back to sleep & items in bed ~75% at baseline (NS)• Breastfeeding 15-20% (NS)
Hutton, et al. Academic Pediatrics, 2017.
✓ Not smoking ✓ No co-bedding✓ Crib use
Adherence With Recommendations
p < 0.05
✓ ~ 2x more crib use and ~3x material sharing for book group✓ ~ 1/2 less bed-sharing for book group (obs & report)
Hutton, et al. Academic Pediatrics, 2017.
Home Visitor Helpfulness
Hutton, et al. under review, 2016.
Time of presentation• 8.81 min (book) • 10.13 min (brochures); p<0.05
– Poor caregiver-child relationship (inappropriate expectations of child)
– Situational times of high stress (poverty, unemployment)
• Crosses all socioeconomic and cultural lines
Starling et al., 1995; Krugman et al., 1986
Calm Baby Gently Program
• Initiative of the Mayerson Center for Safe and Healthy Children and the Council on Child Abuse
• Goal: To prevent abusive head trauma in Greater Cincinnati by educating caregivers on infant crying and the dangers of shaking during the critical period of 1-2 months of age
• Partners: 18 local health centers &primary care practices
CALM BABY GENTLY PROGRAM
• At the 1 month well-child visit:
• Pediatric providers give the educational baby book, “Calm Baby Gently,” to caregivers as a gift
• Providers use the book as a prompt to teach caregivers about when and why infants cry, what they can do to respond and stay calm, and the benefits of early reading
• Book contains phone number for the Crying Baby Helpline
• At the 2 month well-child visit:
• Practices give a one-page survey to caregivers asking about their infant’s crying, how they are responding and coping, and whether the book was helpful
• Providers can use the survey to assess parent needs
WHY THE ONE MONTH VISIT?
Hours of infant crying peak
between 1-2 monthsRates of abusive head trauma
peak between 2-4 months
Other reasons (seed & soil):• Receptiveness to information in birthing hospital (fatigue, afterglow, overload)• Proximity to developmental stage: “Is this important for my baby right now?”
Back Cover Front Cover
In Spanish ->
(Sensitive Period)
(Unexplained Crying)
(Frustrated Caregivers)
(First and Foremost…)
(Calming Strategies)
(Ask for Help)
(Hope: The Sun Rises Again)
Preliminary Data (2016):Book Distribution
• 84% (211/252) of caregivers received the book
• 91% (192/211) of caregivers who received the book read the book
• “If you thought the book was helpful, what was helpful about it?”– Reminder about crying– Calming / Reassuring / Community– Baby liked being read to– Tips– Focuses on baby / understanding about crying– Resource
Preliminary Data (2016):Helpfulness Feedback
• “It reassures that it is ok - if you cannot calm your baby, and it is okay to walk away and regroup”
• “It just tells me we are not alone. Understanding it from baby point of view”
• “It made my baby smile”
• “It just reminds you to stay calm, walk away for a minute”
• “I really like the line ‘Please don't yell at me’”
• “Reminder to be sweet and calm. Not her fault”
So, why do books work?
• Health literacy– Simple story and reading level, jargon-free
– Non-threatening, positive
• Power of narrative– Time tested means to explain our world
– Baby’s point of view, telling the story
• Engagement with message (salience)– Know what to do vs. motivation to do it
– Sense of importance
Other ideas?
Shared Reading & Talking
Safe Baby Spacing(Milestones)
Developmental Milestones• First 2 years• Parent-child engagement• Your baby needs you!