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Extension Service and Healthy Families
Oklahoma: A Statewide Collaboration for New Parents
Jo Robertson
Assistant Professor
Department of Special Education
Murray State University
Murray, Kentucky
Internet address: jo.robertson@coe.murraystate.edu
Arlene Fulton
Child Development Specialist
Oklahoma State University
Stillwater, Oklahoma
Internet address: amfulto@okstate.edu
Marilyn S. Buck
Central District Director
Wisconsin Cooperative Extension
Stevens Point, Wisconsin
Oklahoma State University Cooperative Extension Service has
been involved in parent education through home visitation since
the mid-1980s. Initially this program used volunteers. In 1991,
an Extension Service/U. S. Department of Agriculture Youth-at-
Risk grant enabled one county to employ trained home visitors.
Oklahoma Child Abuse Prevention funding, instituted in 1991
through the Oklahoma Department of Health, enabled Oklahoma State
University to employ home visitors in additional counties.
In 1992, Healthy Families Oklahoma evolved through a
statewide collaboration initiated by the Oklahoma Cooperative
Extension Service and the Oklahoma Committee to Prevent Child
Abuse. At the national level, the National Committee to Prevent
Child Abuse and the Cooperative Extension Service submitted a
proposal to the W.K. Kellogg Foundation to develop pilot programs
around the country using the Healthy Families America model.
Pottawatomie County was selected in 1994 as one of the three
national pilot sites funded. Additional grants, available in 1996
from federal Family Preservation and Support and Office of Child
Abuse, expanded the Healthy Families program. Currently, Oklahoma
State University operates Healthy Families programs in ten
counties. There are a total of nineteen Healthy Families programs
statewide.
Healthy Families America, launched by the National Committee
to Prevent Child Abuse in 1992, is an initiative to establish a
universal, voluntary home visitor system for all new parents to
help their children have a healthy start. Research over the last
two decades has consistently confirmed that providing parent
education and support services about the time of a baby's birth
reduces the risk of child abuse and contributes to positive child
and family outcomes.
Healthy Families Oklahoma is a parent education/support
program for first-time parents. Parents voluntarily enroll during
pregnancy, or after the birth of their babies, and may continue
to receive services until their children are five years of age.
Services include home visits, linkage to community resources such
as a health care provider, monthly group meetings, support, and
parent education focusing on parenting skills, child development,
child health, and other aspects of family functioning. The
program builds on family strengths and offers services that meet
the needs of family members.
As a part of the ongoing collaborative partnership between
Oklahoma State University Cooperative Extension Service and the
Oklahoma Committee to Prevent Child Abuse, First Steps programs,
using trained volunteer home visitors, have been established in
five rural counties in Oklahoma as another method of providing
education and support to new parents. First Steps programs are
less intensive and provide short term (two-five months) education
and support.
Current state collaborators include the Cooperative
Extension Service, Oklahoma Committee to Prevent Child Abuse,
Oklahoma Department of Health, Oklahoma Institute for Child
Advocacy, Headstart, Oklahoma Parents as Teachers, Oklahoma
Department of Human Services, Oklahoma Commission on Children and
Youth, and the Oklahoma Child Abuse Prevention Coalition.
Additionally, Healthy Families programs partner with a variety of
local community agencies, family advocates, and service
providers.
Collaboration Activities
Collaboration is the key to making Healthy Families Oklahoma
programs successful. There are multiple levels of collaboration
focusing on the overburdened families who enroll in Healthy
Families programs. Local program advisory committees composed of
community agencies and organizations provide guidance, resources
and services, and assist programs in connecting with referral
agencies such as the health department, WIC, Indian Health
Services, physicians, hospitals, and schools. Healthy Families
sites have initiated collaborative activities with other
community parent education programs such as Parents As Teachers,
Early Head Start, and Children First (home visitation by nurses
through the health department). Activities have included
determining how parent confidentiality at the time of referral
will be handled, developing a common brochure and designating a
central point of intake in the community for all programs.
Staff from community programs visit referral agencies
together, explaining services and enrollment criteria. In
addition, these programs have co-sponsored community events for
families as well as community in-service education sessions.
Community partners have found that regular meetings enhance
collaboration.
The Healthy Families Oklahoma state collaborative partners
bring together statewide resources and insight. State leaders are
working together to develop a stable funding base and a statewide
system of evaluation, technical assistance and training, and
credentialing for home visitation programs. Additionally, state
leaders co-sponsor state conferences and co-present at state
meetings.
As part of the commitment to training, a Healthy Families
state training team composed of staff from the Oklahoma
Cooperative Extension Service and the Oklahoma Committee to
Prevent Child Abuse has completed requirements for becoming
Healthy Families America trainers. Both these agencies
collaboratively provide technical assistance and on-going
training to program sites. The Oklahoma Child Abuse Prevention
Coalition Legislative Network provides educational information to
governmental officials and agencies to inform them of the impact
of Healthy Families.
The new programs have created the opportunity for new
collaborations within the Cooperative Extension Service. Home
visitation and nutrition education staffs have found much in
common and benefit from similar in-service education topics as
well as networking opportunities. An annual state conference is
held for Cooperative Extension staff delivering nutrition and
parent education through home visits. Home visitation staff have
been trained in Cooperative Extension curriculum materials such
as money management and nutrition.
All these partnerships provide strengths (vision,
leadership, resources, and support) and challenges (different
systems and processes, communication, staff changes, and turf
issues). In Oklahoma, these challenges have been overcome by
having a common vision and mutual respect and through building
trusting relationships. Partnerships maximize efficient use of
scarce resources, prevent duplication of services, and allow
programs to link families with an array of services to meet their
unique needs. Collaboration is critical to meeting the needs of
the diverse families served by these programs.
This article is online at
http://www.joe.org/joe/1998december/iw1.html.
Copyright ©
by Extension Journal, Inc. ISSN 1077-5315.
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