Objective: Despite close to all-embracing access to child healthcare, health divides exist among children in Sweden. Home visits to families with new-born babies are a cost-effective way to identify and strengthen vulnerable families. An extended postnatal home visiting programme has been implemented in a disadvantaged suburb in Stockholm with positive results.

Design: Longitudinal, prospective study and register study from medical records.

Setting: A vulnerable rural area in Sweden.

Intervention: A parent advisor from the social services and a midwife performed an extended home visiting programme during the end of pregnancy to mothers of children born between 1 May 2018 and 31 May 2019. During these children's first 15 months, three additional home visits were made by a parent advisor and a child healthcare nurse. The aim of the study is to evaluate the effect of the intervention on the health of the children and the mothers.

Subjects: All firstborn children at the study site ( = 30 study,  = 55 control group).

Main Outcome Measures: The proportion participating in visits to the child and maternal healthcare services, children being breastfed and receiving childhood vaccinations.

Results: There were fewer absentees in the study group during routine check-up visits (93 vs. 84%). More mothers in the study group attended the check-up with the midwives (90 vs. 80%). More children in the study group were breastfed (90 vs. 67%) and received all vaccinations (100 vs. 96%).

Conclusion: Supplementing the extended home visiting programme with a visit at the end of pregnancy seems to contribute to fewer absentees at routine visits for both mothers and children; furthermore, more children were breastfed and vaccinated compared with the control group.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11001331PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2023.2277756DOI Listing

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