OMB No: 0906-XXXX
Expiration Date: XX/XX/20XX
Public Burden Statement: This collection of information will be used to assess nominated ECHV programs’ interest in and eligibility for participation in the Assessing and Describing Practice Transitions Among Evidence-Based Home Visiting Programs in Response to the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (ADAPT-HV) study. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control number for this information collection is 0915/0906-XXXX and it is valid until XX/XX/202X. This information collection is voluntary. Data will be kept private to the extent allowable by the law. Public reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 1 hour per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden, to HRSA Information Collection Clearance Officer, 5600 Fishers Lane, Room 14N39, Rockville, Maryland, 20857 or [email protected]. Please see https://www.hrsa.gov/about/508-resources for the HRSA digital accessibility statement.
Program Eligibility Protocol
Introduction
[Note: if we have already had informal conversations with this respondent via phone or email, we will skip any elements of the introduction script that have been covered previously.]
My name is [NAME] and I work with The Policy & Research Group (PRG). On behalf of the Health Resources and Services Administration and in partnership with Administration for Children and Families, we are conducting a study that seeks to identify and test changes in home visiting practices in response to the pandemic that have the potential to improve home visiting services in the future. This study focuses on identifying and testing strategies for maintaining and promoting children’s engagement and active participation during virtual visits, such as program staff dropping off activities and materials for children to support content of upcoming visits and home visitors engaging children during virtual visits using puppets, songs, and games. I will refer to these strategies as “virtual engagement strategies.”
We plan to conduct the study using a rapid cycle learning framework. This framework provides an opportunity to identify practices of interest, then improve and deliver them as defined strategies that, eventually, can be scaled across other programs and contexts. The study will take between six and eight months to complete from start to finish; we aim to start the study in [start date]. Right now, we are talking to a range of programs and collecting information on programs that might be a good fit for the study; we will invite programs to participate in the study after these initial conversations.
The purpose of this discussion is to ask you some questions about your program and services to determine whether they are well suited to be included in the study. After explaining the study process in more detail, we want to gauge your interest in participating in the study. If your program is a good fit and you want to participate, we will work closely with you (and any other members of your leadership team who should be involved) to complete a study agreement that lays out roles and responsibilities. Regardless of whether you participate in the study, we would like to provide your program with $100 as a token of our appreciation for your time and participation in this initial discussion.
If you are selected and want to participate, the study has potential benefits to you, other programs like yours, and the clients you serve. Primarily, the study will serve as an opportunity to build knowledge and refine guidance on strategies implemented by home visiting programs to promote engagement and active participation in virtual visits. Ultimately, the study aims to improve the services offered to families. All programs participating in the study will receive site payment of $1,500 for their participation.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. This information collection has been approved under OMB information collection request [OMB number], which expires on [expiration date].
This conversation should take about an hour. Your participation in this information-gathering conversation is voluntary and you have the right to refuse any question. You may end the conversation at any point. There is no penalty if you choose not to participate in this conversation. There are no risks or benefits to your participation in this conversation. If you decide you are interested in participating in the study, we will use the information you provide today to help us make decisions about which programs to ultimate recruit. As such, we may share specific details about your program with HRSA staff members who are part of the ADAPT-HV team during conversations about recruitment. Although your name will not be used in connection with this information, it may be possible to attribute these details to you given your role as a program administrator and other information about your program.
With your permission, I’d like to record this conversation. The recording is simply to supplement our notes as we gather information about your program; it will not be transcribed or shared with anyone outside of the ADAPT-HV study team. The recording will be stored securely and will be deleted at the end of the study. Do I have your permission to record?
Before we begin, do you have any questions about the project? Do you agree to participate in this discussion?
[If permission is granted, begin recording.]
Part 1: Respondent Background
To get started, I’ll ask a few questions about you and your role at [agency].
Question: What is your job title?
Follow-up: How long have you been working at [program name]?
Follow-up: What are your main responsibilities at [program name]?
[Note: In some cases, we may have already collected some of this information through informal conversations with federal staff or program staff, or through preliminary research conducted to identify potential programs to recruit. If that is the case, we will use the information already collected under that effort, and we may ask respondents to confirm the accuracy of previously collected information, but we will not ask respondents to repeat information.]
Now I’d like to get some background information about the home visiting services offered by your program.
Question: Where does your program operate?
Question: What home visiting model or models does your program implement?
Follow-up: How long has your program been implementing this model?
Question: How many families does your program have the capacity to serve?
Follow-up: How many families are you currently serving?
Follow-up: How many home visitors are currently on the team?
Follow-up: What is the current average caseload for home visitors working at [program]?
Probe: maximum caseload for home visitors working at [program]
Follow-up: About how many home visits do home visitors typically schedule/complete in a week? How much does this vary?
Follow-up: How many home visits does each family receive per [week, month], on average?
I have a few questions about the population served by your home visiting program.
Question: Who does your program aim to serve?
Follow-up: Are there communities that you would like to serve but have not engaged?
Probe: age, race/ethnicity, income, location (including urbanicity)
Follow-up: What cultural or community contexts of the families you typically serve influence the services you provide?
Probe: lack of daycare centers in the community; families cautious of being video or audio recorded
Part 3: Program Eligibility
Next, I have some questions about how services are being implemented at your program to determine whether your current processes are a good fit for the study.
Question: In what circumstances do you currently deliver services virtually? By virtual visits, for purposes of this study, we mean a video-based home visit conducted in real time with a caregiver and child. The visit may be conducted using a smartphone, tablet, or computer, as long as the device allows for video-based interaction.
Follow-up: What considerations do home visitors make when scheduling virtual services as opposed to in-person services?
Probe: services that can and cannot be delivered virtually
Probe: home visitors’ capacity and technological capabilities
Follow-up: How frequently do home visitors deliver services virtually? What proportion of services would you say home visitors deliver virtually?
Question: What is the mode of delivery for virtual services (i.e., phone, tablet, computer)?
Probe: how often the mode differs for home visitors versus families
Follow-up: When home visitors have in-person sessions what type of devices or technological capabilities do they typically have? (e.g., internet connection, tablet, laptop, cell phone)
Follow-up: Do most families you serve have the technological capacity to participate in virtual services?
Probe: access to a computer or tablet with a camera for all families
Probe: access to adequate internet or Wi Fi for all families
Probe: adequacy of phones for video services
Probe: support provided by program for families to participate in virtual services
Question: Are there any additional important family, cultural, community, or program-specific contexts that we should be aware of that may influence a family’s ability to effectively participate in virtual home visits (home visits conducted via video)?
Question: Is your program currently implementing any strategies for maintaining and promoting children’s engagement and active participation during virtual visits? We are interested in both program-wide strategies and any strategies that individual home visitors might be using. Please describe them if so.
Follow-up: How widespread is implementation of these strategies at your program?
Probe: implementation of strategies by all home visitors versus a subset
Probe: formality of strategies implemented - systematic implementation of explicit strategy by program, initially testing implementation of explicit strategy, implementing strategy more informally or on an ad hoc basis
Follow-up: Can you briefly explain how these strategies came to be used by your home visitor staff? For example, were they suggested by program model developers as a result of the COVID-19 PHE, or proposed by program leadership, or did they emerge from informal discussion amongst staff?
Question: Are you aware of any documentation that your program has received from model developers, local or state organizations, or funding agencies related to virtual child engagement strategies? If so, would you be willing to share it with us if we agree to partner together?
Follow-up: Has your program leadership or staff developed any formal or informal documentation about or guidance on your program’s use of these strategies? If so, would you be willing to share that with us if we agree to partner together?
Question: Tell me about how you expect the rate of virtual visits to change over [XX time period].
Follow-up: What might influence changes in how often home visitors are providing virtual visits to families?
Part 4: Program Capacity and Interest
If we reach mutual agreement to partner with your program for the study, we will work with program-level leadership to jointly complete a study agreement that lays out roles and responsibilities. Agencies will receive a site payment of $1,500 for participation in the full study. I’d like to describe a few of the key components and get your feedback on whether the processes sound feasible for your agency. In this conversation, I’d like to focus on some of the study processes that stand out to us as potential challenges to incorporate into your program’s workflow. However, we will also have a chance to discuss any questions that have come up for you based on the information sheet we provided that describes the study phases.
If we decide to partner with each other, we will work with your program leadership to formalize a staff and family recruitment plan. In total, the study will request participation from up to 3 program administrative staff (such as program directors, managers, and supervisors), who will be selected by program leadership, and up to 10 home visitors, who will self-select for participation or be recommended by program leadership. Six of these program staff (administrative and/or home visitors) will be asked to participate in focus groups at up to 6 timepoints. We will work with program leadership to develop a plan for selecting these administrative staff and home visitors.
We will also need assistance recruiting up to 6 family members served by your program’s home visitors to participate in 2 focus groups. The participating home visitors will be asked to complete a brief 10- to 15-minute online form weekly during learning cycles (each cycle is ~3 weeks) and to administer a 5-minute form with up to 12 family members (across all participating home visitors) at the end of visits conducted during learning cycles. As tokens of appreciation for participation in the study, we will provide family members who participate in focus groups with a payment of $40 for each family focus group.
Question: Do you think the proposed process for the home visitor and family questionnaires would be feasible at your program?
Probe: questions about this process
If we were to implement the study at your program, we would work with you to designate one program liaison who would help conduct recruitment activities as described above and as detailed in the recruitment plan formalized with program staff. This person would also help us coordinate focus groups with program staff and help with ongoing data collection.
Question: Do you think the proposed process would be feasible at your agency?
Probe: questions about this process
During the first phase of the study (the co-definition phase), we will work closely with program staff (i.e., program managers, supervisors, and home visitors) to understand the strategies your agency is using to engage children during virtual home visits. We will hold two focus groups in this phase. During the first focus group we will learn how, why, and when these strategies are used. During the second focus group, we will identify and define specific strategies that we will ask participating home visitors to implement during their visits in the study period. For example, playing music to help engage children during a virtual visit, or displaying visuals during a video call.
Question: Do you think the proposed process would be feasible at your agency?
Probe: questions about this process
Question: Who at your agency would need to sign off on the strategies selected for implementation during the focus group?
Follow-up: Would it be possible for those individuals to attend the focus group to make it possible to have an approved set of strategies at the end of the focus group?
Over the course of the study, we will also recruit up to 12 family members receiving home visiting services from your program. Up to 6 of these family members would be recruited to participate in 1 or 2 focus groups, using flyers developed by the study team that outline the purpose and benefits of participation. Up to 12 will also be asked by participating home visitors to complete a brief form at the end of visits.
Question: Do you think the proposed process would be feasible at your program?
Probe: questions about this process
Question: Based on what I’ve described of the study so far, does it seem like something your program would be interested in pursuing?
Probe: questions or concerns about logistics described
Probe: questions or concerns about anything detailed in the study information sheet not yet discussed
Part 5: Next Steps
Before we wrap up our conversation, I’d like to talk about a few possible next steps.
Question: Is there anyone else at your program who would need to review or approve partnering with us for the ADAPT-HV study?
Follow-up: Who else at your program would want to review and/or sign a study agreement if we were to formalize a partnership?
Follow-up: Does anyone else at your program need to review and approve recruitment materials for either program staff or families?
Follow-up: Are there regulatory bodies like an Institutional Review Board that would need to review and approve of the study before implementing it at your program?
Follow-up: If yes, what does that process typically look like? How long does that process typically take?
As a reminder, if we decide to move forward with next steps after this call, we’d like to request any documentation you are aware of that your program has developed or received from model developers, local or state organizations, or funding agencies related to virtual child engagement strategies. We will use this information to get acquainted with the practices at your program before the initial focus group.
Part 6: Wrap-up
Thank you very much for your time today. I know I asked a lot of questions and probably raised some questions for you.
Question: What questions do you have? What concerns?
We are currently having conversations with other programs to assess their suitability for the study. We may have some further questions for you before deciding which programs will be recruited to participate. Could we reach out if there are additional questions?
Thank you again for your time! I will reach out with more information soon. Please let me know if you have any questions in the meantime.
If you have any questions about the study, please contact Teresa Smith at The Policy & Research Group ([email protected] or (225) 281-3783).
If you have questions about your rights as a research volunteer, you can call Health Media Lab Institutional Review Board at (202) 549-1982.
The
Policy & Research Group
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Sarah Walsh |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2024-07-22 |