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These analyses examine whether and how EHS programs changed from 2018 to 2022. 

In 2022, the Office of Planning, Research, and Evaluation (OPRE)— in collaboration with ACF’s Tribal Home Visiting Program and the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) —contracted with James Bell Associates (JBA) and the Centers for American Indian Alaska Native Health (CAIANH) at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Denver. The resulting project, the Center for Indigenous Research Collaboration and Learning for Home Visiting (CIRCLE-HV) , will fund Research-Practice Partnerships in which participants pursue their own research aims; it will also partner closely with home visiting programs serving Indigenous families to pursue a Cross-Site Study. To inform these activities, the project team set out to develop knowledge on fundamental principles of Indigenous methodologies and to identify past examples of braided Indigenous and Western research approaches.

Using a Continuous Quality Improvement Collaborative Approach in Indigenous Contexts: Lessons Learned from Tribal Home Visiting

This two-page fact sheet answers basic questions about HomVEE.

This brief summarizes findings from the Home Visiting Evidence of Effectiveness Review (HomVEE).

This brief describes the use of concept mapping to engage individuals with lived experience in developing a measure of reflective supervision for the early childhood home visiting context.

Read the HomeEc project's special topics study on the economic experiences of select early childhood home visiting programs and the families they served during the COVID-19 pandemic, including implications that could be relevant for future service delivery disruptions.

Explore a MIHOPE report that sheds light on about why and how families engage in home visiting, based on in-depth interviews with mothers who participated in MIECHV home visiting programs.

 

Explore a MIHOPE report that describes how the study team maintained contact with MIHOPE families between data collections; trends in the families’ life circumstances since they entered the study; and the effects of MIECHV home visiting programs on a limited set of outcomes when children were 2.5 and 3.5 years old.

 

This report shares key information about the design, methods, and findings of Baby FACES 2022.