Parenting Support Programme
Cross-source consensus on Parenting Support Programme from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
Preparation
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- The programme starts in the neonatal intensive care unit and continues at home until 4 months corrected age. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study
- The PRePaR intervention was co-developed with families and professionals in the care pathway. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study
- Parents receive a booklet divided into Birth, Hospitalisation, Final Check-Out, and Follow-Up phases. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study
- A preliminary qualitative phase identified streamlining infant care and referral and increasing parent empowerment as two main action areas. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study
- The digital platform provides provider videos, parent testimonials, emotion-management exercises, and developmental support content for everyday situations. — Acceptability and feasibility of a community–hospital parenting support and prevention programme for families of infants at high neurodevelopmental risk following neonatal encephalopathy: protocol of the PRePaR (PRevention and support for Parenthood in early Rehabilitation) mixed-methods study