| CAMI+ |
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(Computer-Assisted Motivational Interviewing Plus Home Visiting)Program Components
For Use With
Evaluation Methodology
Evaluation Findings
Evaluators' Comments: Motivational interviewing aims to highlight discrepancies between current behaviors and personal goals, thereby promoting an intention and optimism for change... This computer assisted motivational intervention, conducted by paraprofessionals in community-based settings, is effective in reducing a subsequent birth within 24 months to low-income, African American teenage mothers... Findings suggest that a motivational intervention ... is effective but its impact may be attenuated when insurance coverage is inadequate. Program Description
Participants receive biweekly to monthly home visits, parent training, and case management from their CAMI counselor. CAMI counselors are African American paraprofessional women, members of the communities where the teens live, and chosen for their empathetic qualities, rapport with adolescents, and knowledge of the community. The counselors begin developing a relationship with each teen as soon as they are assigned and prior to the teen's giving birth. The counselors provide parent training using a 16-module curriculum that is grounded in social cognitive theory and created specifically for urban African American teenage mothers. Modules address age- and developmentally-appropriate feeding, growth, play, and discipline of infants and toddlers. In addition, three modules focus on safer sex, partner negotiation, and setting goals. Finally, the counselors provide case management, assisting each teenage mother successfully to negotiate the complex social and health care services she and her infant often need. Evaluation Methodology
Participants completed baseline interviews prior to randomization. The interview measured characteristics associated with repeat pregnancy, factors that might influence full participation, demographic characteristics, insurance status, living arrangements, relationship with the baby's father, school attendance, parity, future contraceptive and pregnancy intentions, sexual decision-making competence, depressive symptoms, substance use, and social support. Participants were then randomized to one of three conditions:
Thus, the final sample comprised 235 participants. CAMI counselors completed an initial 2.5 days of training and participated thereafter in biweekly group meetings during the first four months of the project. Counselors initiated CAMI sessions by six weeks postpartum. However, evaluation found that most of the CAMI counselors began their scheduled home visits (CAMI+ condition) soon after a teen was assigned as part of their caseload. CAMI sessions continued quarterly through 24 months postpartum. Evaluators defined full CAMI adherence as receiving seven or more CAMI sessions; however, participants might have received as many as nine sessions. Two-thirds of CAMI+ and CAMI only sessions occurred in the teen's home. The remainder occurred in community-based settings because of safety concerns related to drug trafficking in the teen's home. Each CAMI counselor carried an equivalent case load. CAMI+ counselors had a maximum case load of 25 adolescents because they visited the teens biweekly or monthly and provided parenting training and case management as well as the quarterly CAMI counseling. CAMI-only counselors met quarterly with 60 adolescents because they provided no additional case management, parenting training, or home visits. If a participant in either the CAMI+ or the CAMI-only groups experienced a pregnancy, she received no further CAMI sessions. To measure intervention adherence, CAMI counselors completed standardized forms at each encounter. The evaluation measured repeat births only and not changes in attitudes, knowledge or behaviors. Long-Term Impact
Compared with those in the control group, CAMI+ participants showed a trend toward fewer repeat birth (25.0 versus 13.8 percent; P=.08). Compared to controls, those in the CAMI-only group also showed a statistically insignificant trend toward fewer repeat births (25.0 versus 17.2 percent; P=.32). The 80 adolescent mothers in the CAMI+ group experienced 11 repeat births within two years of the index birth; the 87 mothers in the CAMI-only group experienced 15 repeat births; and the 68 mothers in the control group experienced 17 repeat births. Note: Evaluation also found that continuous insurance coverage was independently associated with a lower risk of repeat birth (P<.05) among adolescent mothers exposed to CAMI+. Continuous insurance coverage moderated the risk for repeat birth among CAMI+ mothers (P<.05) versus CAMI+ mothers without continuous insurance (P=.63). For More Information, Contact• Beth Barnet, MD, Department of Family & Community Medicine, University of Maryland; This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it |








