Back to Search Start Over

Feasibility of linking universal child and family healthcare and financial counselling: findings from the Australian Healthier Wealthier Families (HWF) mixed-methods study.

Authors :
Price AMH
White N
Burley J
Zhu A
Contreras-Suarez D
Wang S
Stone M
Trotter K
Mrad M
Caldwell J
Bishop R
Chota S
Bui L
Sanger D
Roles R
Watts A
Samir N
Grace R
Raman S
Kemp L
Lingam R
Eapen V
Woolfenden S
Goldfeld S
Source :
BMJ open [BMJ Open] 2023 Nov 22; Vol. 13 (11), pp. e075651. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Nov 22.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objectives: 'Healthier Wealthier Families' (HWF) seeks to reduce financial hardship in the early years by embedding a referral pathway between Australia's universal child and family health (CFH) services and financial counselling. This pilot study investigated the feasibility and short-term impacts of HWF, adapted from a successful Scottish initiative.<br />Methods: Setting: CFH services in five sites across two states, coinciding with the COVID-19 pandemic.<br />Participants: Caregivers of children aged 0-5 years experiencing financial hardship (study-designed screen).<br />Design: Mixed methods. With limited progress using a randomised trial (RCT) design in sites 1-3 (March 2020-November 2021), qualitative interviews with service providers identified implementation barriers including stigma, lack of knowledge of financial counselling, low financial literacy, research burden and pandemic disruption. This informed a simplified RCT protocol (site 4) and direct referral model (no randomisation, pre-post evaluation, site 5) (June 2021-May 2022).<br />Intervention: financial counselling; comparator: usual care (sites 1-4). Feasibility measures: proportions of caregivers screened, enrolled, followed up and who accessed financial counselling. Impact measures: finances (quantitative) and other (qualitative) to 6 months post-enrolment.<br />Results: 355/434 caregivers completed the screen (60%-100% across sites). In RCT sites (1-4), 79/365 (19%-41%) reported hardship but less than one-quarter enrolled. In site 5, n=66/69 (96%) caregivers reported hardship and 44/66 (67%) engaged with financial counselling; common issues were utility debts (73%), and obtaining entitlements (43%) or material aid/emergency relief (27%). Per family, financial counselling increased income from government entitlements by an average $A6504 annually plus $A784 from concessions, grants, brokerage and debt waivers. Caregivers described benefits (qualitative) including reduced stress, practical help, increased knowledge and empowerment.<br />Conclusions: Financial hardship screening via CFH was acceptable to caregivers, direct referral was feasible, but individual randomisation was infeasible. Larger-scale implementation will require careful, staged adaptations where CFH populations and the intervention are well matched and low burden evaluation.<br />Trial Registration Number: ACTRN12620000154909.<br />Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.<br /> (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2044-6055
Volume :
13
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMJ open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37993153
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-075651