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What factors contribute to positive early childhood health and development in Australian Aboriginal children? Protocol for a population-based cohort study using linked administrative data (The Seeding Success Study)

机译:哪些因素有助于澳大利亚原住民儿童的早期幼儿健康和发展?使用链接的行政数据进行基于人群的队列研究的方案(“播种成功研究”)

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Introduction Australian Aboriginal children are more likely than non-Aboriginal children to have developmental vulnerability at school entry that tracks through to poorer literacy and numeracy outcomes and multiple social and health disadvantages in later life. Empirical evidence identifying the key drivers of positive early childhood development in Aboriginal children, and supportive features of local communities and early childhood service provision, are lacking. Methods and analysis The study population will be identified via linkage of Australian Early Development Census data to perinatal and birth registration data sets. It will include an almost complete population of children who started their first year of full-time school in New South Wales (NSW), Australia, in 2009 and 2012. Early childhood health and development trajectories for these children will be constructed via linkage to a range of administrative data sets relating to birth outcomes, congenital conditions, hospital admissions, emergency department presentations, receipt of ambulatory mental healthcare services, use of general practitioner services, contact with child protection and out-of-home care services, receipt of income assistance and fact of death. Using multilevel modelling techniques, we will quantify the contributions of individual-level and area-level factors to variation in early childhood development outcomes in Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children. Additionally, we will evaluate the impact of two government programmes that aim to address early childhood disadvantage, the NSW Aboriginal Maternal and Infant Health Service and the Brighter Futures Program. These evaluations will use propensity score matching methods and multilevel modelling. Ethics and dissemination Ethical approval has been obtained for this study. Dissemination mechanisms include engagement of stakeholders (including representatives from Aboriginal community controlled organisations, policy agencies, service providers) through a reference group, and writing of summary reports for policy and community audiences in parallel with scientific papers.
机译:简介澳大利亚原住民儿童比非原住民儿童更有可能在入学时出现发展脆弱性,这种脆弱性可追溯到较差的识字和计算结果以及以后生活中的多种社会和健康不利因素。缺乏确定土著儿童早期积极发展的主要驱动力,当地社区的支持特征和提供早期儿童服务的经验证据。方法和分析将通过澳大利亚早期发育普查数据与围产期和出生登记数据集的链接来确定研究人群。其中将包括几乎全部儿童,这些儿童于2009年和2012年在澳大利亚新南威尔士州(NSW)开始接受全日制学习的第一年。这些儿童的早期健康和发展轨迹将通过与与出生结局,先天性疾病,住院情况,急诊科介绍,接收门诊精神保健服务,使用全科医生服务,接触儿童保护和家庭护理服务,获得收入援助有关的行政数据集的范围和死亡的事实。使用多级建模技术,我们将量化土著和非土著儿童的个体水平和区域水平因素对儿童早期发育结果变化的贡献。此外,我们将评估旨在解决幼儿期不利因素的两个政府计划,新南威尔士州土著母婴健康服务和光明未来计划的影响。这些评估将使用倾向得分匹配方法和多层次建模。道德与传播这项研究已获得道德认可。传播机制包括利益相关者(包括来自原住民社区控制组织,政策机构,服务提供商的代表)通过参考小组的参与,以及与科学论文同时编写政策和社区受众的总结报告。

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