Patterns of service use in preschool children: correlates, consequences, and the role of early intervention.

Child Dev

Center for Children and Families, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA.

Published: December 2000

AI Article Synopsis

  • The article analyzes the types of services (educational, health, and psychosocial) that preschoolers receive by age 5, focusing on a sample of 869 children from an early intervention program.
  • Four service groups were identified: only basic health services, basic health with education, a mix of health, education, and psychosocial services, and specialized health and educational services.
  • The study found that various factors like maternal education and family income influenced service usage patterns, which remained consistent over the years, while participation in the early intervention program did not significantly impact the service patterns at age 5.

Article Abstract

This article explores service use broadly by examining the mix of educational, health, and psychosocial services that preschool children received in the fifth year of life. The sample included 869 children who participated in the Infant Health and Development Program, an early intervention program designed to evaluate the efficacy of a comprehensive early intervention for low-birth-weight, premature infants during the first 3 years of life and who were followed until age 5. Cluster analyses of services at age 5 yielded 4 service groups--basic health only (doctor visits; n = 114); basic health and educational services (doctor visits and school/preschool; n = 444); basic health, educational, and psychosocial services (or multiple services; doctor visits, school/preschool, and psychosocial services; n = 129); and specialized health and educational services (doctor visits, school/preschool, emergency room visits and special medical visits [ear and/or eye examinations]; n = 182). Results suggest that neonatal health conditions, maternal education at the time of the child's birth, child developmental status at age 3, and maternal health, family income, and insurance status at age 5 were associated with patterns of services at age 5. Patterns of use are consistent over time (the first 3 years of life to the 5th year of life). After covarying the correlates of the service patterns, participation in the early intervention was not associated with patterns of services at age 5, and service patterns were associated with child well-being (health, school readiness, mental health), but results differed by intervention status. Findings are discussed in terms of preventive, responsive, and deficit models of service use.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-8624.00186DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

early intervention
16
doctor visits
16
psychosocial services
12
services age
12
health educational
12
services doctor
12
visits school/preschool
12
health
10
services
9
preschool children
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!