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Prepared by: Fiona Adams, Ian Hill, and Sarah Benatar August 2012 Best Start LA Pilot Community Evaluation Focus Group Report 2 Best Start in Metro LA: More Insights from Parents, Home Visitors, And Community Stakeholders about the Investment and its Progress Prepared for: First 5 LA The University of California at Los Angeles The University of California at Los Angeles
Transcript

Prepared by:

Fiona Adams, Ian Hill, and Sarah Benatar

August 2012

Best Start LA Pilot Community Evaluation Focus Group Report 2

Best Start in Metro LA: More Insights from Parents, Home Visitors, And Community Stakeholders about the Investment and its Progress

Prepared for: First 5 LA

The University of

California at Los Angeles

The University of

California at Los Angeles

Acknowledgments

We would once again like to extend our sincere thanks to the many parents, home visitors,

and community members who voluntarily gave their time and energy to participate in our

focus groups; without their input and insights, we would not have been able to develop this

report.

We are also greatly indebted to the staff of the numerous community-based agencies that

assisted us with organizing and conducting our focus groups. In particular, we salute: Lynn

Kersey, Luz Chacon, and the numerous parent coaches at Maternal and Child Health Access;

Veronica Trigueros and other staff at Para Los Niños; and Vickie Kropenske and staff at the

California Hospital Medical Center’s Hope Street Family Center. The trust and respect these

individuals (and their colleagues) command among the families and residents of the Metro

LA pilot community paved the way for our successful focus groups.

In addition, we thank Deborah Grodzicki, a graduate student from UCLA, who provided

assistance in conducting and transcribing focus groups in Spanish.

Finally, we gratefully acknowledge the direction and helpful guidance provided by our

project officers at First 5 LA: Christine Aque and Hayley Roper-Fingerhut.

For more information about First 5 LA and its programs, go to http://www.first5la.org. For

more information about Best Start LA, go to http://www.beststartla.org.

Contents

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ........................................................................................................... i

I. INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................... 1

II. METHODS ............................................................................................................................... 3

III. FINDINGS .............................................................................................................................. 6

A. WHAT DO PARENTS SAY ABOUT WELCOME BABY! HOME VISITING? ..................................... 6

B. WHAT DO HOME VISITORS SAY ABOUT SERVING FAMILIES UNDER BEST START LA? ........ 15

C. WHAT DO COMMUNITY STAKEHOLDERS SAY ABOUT BEST START LA?............................... 25

1. Community Guidance Body members

2. Collaborative Partner Grantees

IV. CONCLUSIONS ................................................................................................................... 34

REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................ 34

APPENDIX 1: FOCUS GROUP MODERATOR’S GUIDES ............................................... 39

i

Executive Summary

Parents and community stakeholders in one Los Angeles community continue to voice generally

strong support for services and activities being conducted as part of Best Start LA (BSLA), a

place-based investment by First 5 Los Angeles (F5LA) designed to improve the wellbeing,

development, and care experienced by children ages 0 through 5 and their parents. Based on a

series of focus groups conducted in BSLA’s pilot community—Metro LA—the investment is

most clearly benefiting mothers who receive home visiting services and support, but also appears

to be mostly well received in the community as it continues to work to create an environment

where young children are born healthy and grow up eager to learn, with the ability to reach their

full potential.

Best Start LA is composed of multiple interwoven strategies designed to strengthen the

capacity of families to raise children, and the capacity of communities and broader systems to

support families. BSLA is being rolled out in a total of 14 communities across Los Angeles

County, but was first launched as a pilot in a seven square mile neighborhood in downtown L.A.

that has been designated Metro LA. F5LA has contracted with a variety of community-based

organizations and service providers in Metro LA to implement the following core strategies:

Welcome Baby! home visiting: This family-level activity brings nurses and parent

coaches into the home to visit families prenatally and post-partum to provide a range of

health, developmental, and education supports.

Community mobilization and place-based strategies: This community-level activity

aims to mobilize parents and other community members and to facilitate their

identification of community needs, and services to address those needs.

Systems change activities: System-level investments promote the development of

family-friendly services, policies, and systems at the community and county levels.

This report presents findings from the second round of focus groups conducted as part of

the Urban Institute’s six-year evaluation of BSLA in Metro LA. A total of six focus groups were

conducted across three groups of participants: mothers receiving Welcome Baby! home visiting;

nurses and parent coaches providing home visiting support; and community stakeholders

involved in mobilization efforts and the implementation of services to support a family-friendly

community. The focus groups explored parents’ views of whether home visiting has helped

them raise their newborn children, home visitors’ views on the effects and effectiveness of the

services they render, and community stakeholders’ views on whether BSLA’s mobilization

efforts are engaging and energizing residents and leading to improved services and supports for

families. Key findings from the focus groups include the following:

ii

Mothers receiving Welcome Baby! home visiting, as they did 15 months earlier,

expressed great satisfaction with and appreciation of the service. Nearly half of mothers

reported learning about Welcome Baby! prenatally (rather than after delivery at the

hospital), reflecting the success of an important new outreach goal: to begin assisting

mothers earlier in the process. Parents were hungry for and looked forward to the

promised assistance and described receiving a wide range of supports from the home

visitors, including help with breastfeeding, postpartum “blues,” child sleeping positions

and strategies, diet and nutrition, child development milestones to look for, and home

safety. Numerous focus group participants praised the family-centered approach of their

parent coaches, noting how support and assistance was often extended beyond mother

and child to other family members, husbands, and siblings. The only shortcoming

described by parents was Welcome Baby’s lack of a visit during the five month span

from infants’ 4th

to 9th

month—a period of great change when additional help and advice

would have been welcomed. Parents generally felt that their communities did not offer

abundant support to families with young children, and cited a lack of safe parks in which

to play, a shortage of child care resources, and concerns about crime and violence.

Unfortunately, Welcome Baby! participants are still largely unaware of the broader

BSLA initiative in their community, and only somewhat more familiar with the First 5

LA organization and its goals. Less than one in 10 participants said they had either

heard of or participated in any of BSLA’s parent engagement events. (At least some of

this low recognition could likely be due to the fact that Welcome Baby! serves a

catchment area broader than the Metro LA community boundaries and focus group

participants could have been recruited from neighborhoods outside Metro LA.)

Welcome Baby! home visitors described their various efforts to modify and fine-tune the

Welcome Baby! model to improve its capacity to serve and retain mothers of newborns.

One critical shift noted was the hiring of dedicated Outreach Specialists who focus solely

on recruitment of expectant mothers, thereby freeing up Parent Coaches to concentrate

on home visiting with enrollees. Outreach to local prenatal clinics and at community

events is augmented by highly productive coordination with California Hospital Medical

Center’s (CHMC’s) Outreach Department staff, which gives Welcome Baby! Outreach

Specialists access to all of the hospital physicians and clients. Another key change to the

model was the swapping of the two-week postpartum phone call with the two-month

postpartum home visit; nurses and parent coaches universally cited the benefits of

making earlier face-to-face contact with new mothers, saying that it helped cement the

presence of Welcome Baby!, improve continuity as nurses hand clients off to parent

coaches, build stronger, earlier rapport between coaches and new mothers, solidify the

establishment of breastfeeding by mothers, and increase the odds that mothers will be

retained in the program through to completion. Three years in, it appears that Welcome

Baby! is operating at full capacity. Still, home visitors wished the program had the

iii

ability to add a 6-month and a 12-month visit to the protocol, and also hoped to add

mental health capacity to the array of services it provides.

Community stakeholders, including both members of the Metro LA Community

Guidance Body and representatives of a sample of Collaborative Partner Grantees,

expressed both excitement and gratitude for the benefits that BSLA is slowly bringing to

their community, as well as frustration with the process that often seems disorganized

and inefficient. CGB members described very positive developments regarding parent

involvement, task force formation, and Collaborative Partner Grant projects, but also

unfortunate dynamics surrounding continued disruptive leadership changes at PLN, and

increasingly bureaucratic oversight by F5LA that some felt was somewhat stifling

creativity and progress. Collaborative partner grantees, meanwhile, expressed pride and

excitement regarding the projects they had developed, but also described the challenges

surrounding implementation, focusing criticism primarily on the three-month period that

was provided for project completion, a timespan that was described as too short for true,

sustainable community change. Still, collaborative partner projects were reportedly

embraced by the community and well used. When asked about their broader familiarity

with BSLA, participants (as employees of community-based agencies) were generally

aware of BSLA, and some had positive views. But several also still held strong, hurt

feelings over a controversy that surrounded the initial launch of the place-based

investment, and believed it had had lasting detrimental effects on the project’s potential.

Still, despite the ups and downs, community members held fundamentally positive

feelings for the work they were doing and the projects that had been enabled.

Focus groups can provide rich qualitative insights into how a program—like Best Start

LA—is implemented and affecting its target populations and communities. Inherent to this

method, however, the small numbers of people with whom we spoke limits the extent to which

we can generalize our findings and reach definitive conclusions.

The findings from this second round of focus group with parents of young children,

providers, and community members provide additional insights into the progress being made by

BSLA in Metro LA. It is hoped that they can also shed light on important, ongoing lessons for

F5LA and leaders in the other 13 communities where Best Start LA is currently being initiated,

so that they can more effectively and efficiently launch their own place-based efforts.

1

I. Background and Introduction

In June 2009, the First 5 Los Angeles (F5LA) Board of Commissioners approved its FY 2009-

2015 Strategic Plan (First 5 LA 2010). This strategic plan represented a new commitment by the

Commission to directly fund specific communities in Los Angeles County, called “Best Start

Communities.” F5LA has identified 14 Best Start communities throughout Los Angeles County.

Through the Best Start framework, F5LA hopes to make Los Angeles’ diverse communities

places where young children are born healthy and raised in supportive environments that allow

them to grow up eager to learn and with the ability to reach their full potential.

The Best Start Communities’ investment represented a partial, but important shift in F5LA’s

grant-making from primarily funding programs based on specific initiatives, to a community-

based approach known as “place-based.” The place-based approach enables F5LA to focus its

human and financial resources in entire communities to improve the lives of children and

families, and works to affect change at three levels: child and family, community, and systems.

The investment thus includes multiple interwoven strategies designed to strengthen the capacity

of families to raise children, and the capacity of communities and broader systems to support

families. Ultimately, Best Start LA (BSLA) aims to achieve four outcomes for children—

specifically, that they are:

Born healthy;

Maintain healthy weight;

Safe from abuse and neglect; and

Ready for kindergarten.

Best Start LA was first launched in a “pilot” community referred to as Metro LA. Metro LA

encompasses parts of four downtown Los Angeles neighborhoods: Pico-Union, Koreatown, the

Byzantine Latino Quarter, and South L.A. (See Figure 1). F5LA’s intent is to use lessons from

implementation of BSLA in Metro LA to inform the future scaling up of the initiative in other

communities in Los Angeles County.

To achieve its goals, F5LA has contracted with a variety of community-based organizations

and service providers in the pilot community to implement the following core BSLA strategies:

Home visiting: Welcome Baby! is the family-level activity that brings nurses, college-

educated “parent coaches,” and paraprofessionals to visit families in the home prenatally,

at birth, and postpartum to provide breast-feeding support, guidance on infant health and

development, and referrals to needed resources and services.

2

Community Mobilization and Place-Based Strategies: This community-level activity

empowers a community-based “lead entity,” supported by Community Based Action

Research methods, to mobilize community members, to facilitate their identification of

needs in their neighborhoods, and to provide strategies and services to address those

needs.

Systems Change: Investments at the system level promote the development of family-

friendly services, policies, and systems at the community and county levels.

Figure 1: Map of Metro LA Pilot Community

This report was developed as part of the Best Start LA Pilot Community Evaluation under a

contract between F5LA and the Urban Institute. The evaluation was launched in 2009 to

document and assess the implementation and impacts of the initiative. The Institute and its

partner—the University of California, Los Angeles—are conducting a broad range of evaluation

activities over the life of the contract, including annual case studies of implementation in Metro

LA, a longitudinal household survey of parents, and analysis of secondary community data. In

addition, the evaluation includes three rounds of focus groups with families and community

3

members in Metro LA, conducted every other year; this report summarizes the findings from our

second round of focus groups, conducted in Year 3 of the evaluation period.

Four types of focus groups were conducted—with parents of children receiving BSLA’s

Welcome Baby! home visiting, with home visitors working with families, with community

representatives involved with community mobilization efforts, and with representatives of

community-based organizations that received grants to implement community services. Focus

group discussions were designed to explore participants’ experiences with BSLA, their opinions

about how well the program met their (or their clients’) needs, and their ideas for how it could be

improved.

The remainder of this report summarizes the findings of our focus groups by presenting:

Parents’ views of how Welcome Baby! home visiting has helped them in raising their

newborns;

Home visitors’ views on the design of the Welcome Baby! program and their

continued experiences rendering services;

Community stakeholders’—represented by members of Metro LA’s Community

Guidance Body and Collaborative Partner Grant recipients—views of efforts to

mobilize residents of Metro LA to organize, identify community needs, and develop

processes and services for improving community supports for families with young

children.

A summary of our research methods precedes and provides context for the focus group findings.

II. Methods

In April 2012, six focus groups were conducted in Los Angeles, California with four different

types of participants. During the focus group design phase, the evaluation team developed four

moderator’s guides tailored for each type of focus group, one of which was translated into

Spanish (see Appendix).

The first of the four participant groups was Welcome Baby! clients; three focus groups were

conducted with these individuals, including two in English, and one in Spanish. Of these three

groups, one was with “graduates” of the program, and two were with current clients.1 Graduates

of the program were defined as those who had completed the 9-month postpartum home visit.

1 Participants in the “graduates” group were Spanish speakers, owing to the fact that early participants in Welcome

Baby! home visiting were much more likely to be recent immigrant, monolingual Spanish-speaking mothers.

Participants in the “current enrollees” groups were either bi-lingual or English-only speakers, reflecting changing

demographics among Welcome Baby! recipients.

4

Current clients were eligible for participation if they had received at least the 3- to 4-month

postpartum home visit by the date of the focus groups. Welcome Baby! clients meeting these

criteria were recruited for participation with the assistance of Welcome Baby! parent coaches

(i.e., home visitors) employed by Maternal and Child Health Access (MCH Access), the agency

contracting with F5LA to render the service. Parent coaches telephoned clients using a

recruitment script and following sampling criteria designed by Urban Institute evaluators,

recruiting mothers from MCH Access’ roster of active clients. As detailed in Table 1 below, a

total of 31 Welcome Baby! clients participated in these three focus groups. The Welcome Baby!

clients moderator’s guide included questions about the following topics: client background;

recruitment experiences with Welcome Baby!; content and characteristics of home visits; clients’

relationships with home visitors; most and least helpful aspects of home visiting; clients’ unmet

needs; and clients’ perceptions of their community—its strengths, weaknesses, and availability

of services. The Welcome Baby! clients moderator’s guide was translated into Spanish by

Spanish-speaking staff at the Urban Institute and UCLA.

To complement the discussions with clients, a focus group was held with Welcome Baby!

home visiting staff. Home visitors were recruited directly at MCH Access by agency supervisors

utilizing selection criteria designed by the Urban evaluation team. A total of ten home visitors

with different roles and varying levels of experience and tenure with the program—one outreach

specialist, eight parent coaches, and one nurse—participated in this focus group. The Welcome

Baby! home visitors moderator’s guide included questions about home visitors’ background and

training, outreach and recruitment of clients, characteristics of clients, home visitor caseload,

content and characteristics of a typical home visit, retention of clients in the program, data

collecting and reporting systems, and rewards and challenges of providing in-home support.

One focus group was held with members of Metro LA’s Community Guidance Body (CGB).

CGB members—composed of parents and representatives of community-based organizations—

were directly recruited by Urban Institute staff with the assistance of managers at Para Los

Niños, the lead entity in Metro LA facilitating the community mobilization/strategies component

of Best Start LA. A total of twelve CGB members—roughly one-third of all active CGB

members—participated in this focus group. Participants included a roughly equal mix of Spanish

and English speakers; one-half were parents living in the community, while the other half

represented a variety of organizations, including a worksite wellness program, a science

education center, a speech and hearing clinic, a community action agency, and a head start

program. The CGB members moderator’s guide included questions about the following topics:

members’ personal and professional background; perceptions of the Metro LA community;

formation and composition of the CGB; roles and responsibilities; progress in community

mobilization efforts; challenges facing the community and the CGB and lessons learned.

Finally, a focus group was held with recipients of the first round of Collaborative Partner

Grants (also known as “mini grants”) in Metro LA. These grantees were recruited directly over

the phone by staff at the Urban Institute. A total of seven Collaborative Partner Grantees (out of

5

16 total grantees) participated in this focus group. The collaborative partner grantees moderator’s

guide included questions about the grantees’ scope of work for this funding, implementation

experiences, continuation of projects after the first grant cycle, perceptions of Metro LA

community, Best Start’s progress in Metro LA thus far, challenges facing the community, and

lessons learned.

Table 1. Focus Group Composition and Participation

Focus Group Participant Type Number of

Groups

Total Number of

Participants

Welcome Baby! English-speaking clients 2 21

Welcome Baby! Spanish-speaking clients 1 10

Welcome Baby! Home Visitors 1 10

Community Guidance Body Members 1 12

Collaborative Partner Grantees 1 7

Total 6 60

Each focus group lasted between one and two hours. Welcome Baby! clients, CGB members

and Collaborative Partner Grantees each received a $50 cash payment in appreciation for their

participation. Light refreshments and on-site child care (for clients) were provided during the

focus groups.

All focus group participants were given an informed consent form in accordance with Urban

Institute Institutional Review Board (IRB) rules, regulations, and prior approval, emphasizing

that participation was voluntary and that participants’ privacy would be protected. All focus

group proceedings were digitally recorded and transcribed. Bilingual staff translated the

transcript of the group conducted in Spanish into English.

To analyze the results of the focus groups, the evaluation team utilized commonly accepted

qualitative research methods. Unabridged transcripts, along with field notes, served as the basis

for the analysis. Evaluators carefully reviewed each transcript and categorized participation

responses using a data analysis sheet that mirrored the content and structure of the focus group

moderator’s guides. Two evaluation staff independently reviewed each transcript and

categorized responses. Categorizations of participant responses were compared, contrasted, and

checked for consistency. Dominant themes and divergent opinions and experiences were noted,

discussed, and summarized. Finally, relevant quotations were selected to illustrate key points

based on frequency and richness to illustrate key points.

Focus groups represent a qualitative research method. As such, they can provide valuable

and nuanced insights into individuals’ experiences with a particular product, process, or program

6

(in this case, the Welcome Baby! home visiting program, and the community strategies

component of Best Start LA). By their nature, however, focus groups typically obtain

information from a relatively small number of individuals and, thus, cannot be presumed to be

representative of the entire population of interest. For our focus groups with home visitors, CGB

members, and mini-grant recipients, however, this limitation was less present. In each of these

cases, we spoke with samples representing between one-third and one-half of the available

universe of participants, and thus can assume we heard a relatively robust representation of

available opinions.

III. Findings

The following discussion synthesizes the major findings of our focus groups. The presentation is

organized to address, in turn, findings related to parents receiving Welcome Baby! home visiting,

parent coaches and nurses rendering home visiting services, and community stakeholders and

Collaborative Partner grantees involved in Metro LA’s place-based efforts.

A. What Do Parents Say About Welcome Baby! Home Visiting?

The Welcome Baby! program is the child/family-centered component of BSLA in the Metro LA

pilot community. Maternal and Child Health (MCH) Access, a community-based organization in

downtown Los Angeles, administers the program under a subcontract with the California

Hospital Medical Center (CHMC). Welcome Baby! is a free, voluntary family engagement

program offered to pregnant women who give birth at CHMC, the only birthing hospital located

within Metro LA. The program was launched in November 2009 and, by spring of 2012, over

2,000 mothers had received its home-visiting services. Women may enroll at one of two

engagement points: prenatally (at various clinics, agencies, and WIC sites in the community), or

after delivery at CHMC. The home visits are conducted by parent coaches and nurses. The goal

of Welcome Baby! is to “enhance the wellbeing of mothers and their families” (MCH Access

2011). The Welcome Baby! protocol includes the following “engagement points” (all or some of

which may occur, depending on when women enroll and whether or not they complete the entire

program):

A prenatal home visit at any point up to 27 weeks gestation

A phone call between 20 and 32 weeks gestation

A prenatal home visit between 28 and 36 weeks gestation

A hospital visit, following delivery (conducted by “hospital liaison” staff)

A nurse home visit within 72 hours of discharge from the hospital

7

A home visit at two weeks postpartum2

A phone call at one to two months postpartum

A home visit at three to four months postpartum

A final home visit at nine months postpartum3

The actual content of each Welcome Baby! engagement point varies. Previous case studies

and focus group reports produced under this evaluation outline the content of these visits (Hill &

Adams, 2011, Hill et al. 2011).

1. Profile of Welcome Baby! Clients

A total of thirty-one Welcome Baby! clients participated in the three focus groups. As noted

above, two of these groups were with English-speaking clients who had received at least the 3-4

month home visit, and the third was held with a group of Spanish-speaking “graduates” of the

Welcome Baby! program (i.e., they had completed all home visits up through program’s final 9-

month engagement point). In one enrollee group, there was a client who dropped out of the

program after being initially recruited in the hospital who was invited to share her experiences

related to outreach and recruitment. For one-third of clients, the child enrolled in Welcome Baby!

was their first; all other clients had between two and four children. More than half of participants

had lived in the Los Angeles area for their entire life.

2. Clients’ Early Experiences with the Welcome Baby! Program

When asked how they first heard about the program, most clients indicated that they first heard

about Welcome Baby! at the point at which they were recruited to the program—with just one

client having heard about it through word-of-mouth before signing up. Roughly half of focus

group participants indicated that they heard about it prenatally, while visiting their physician’s

office. For some of these, this was during prenatal classes at their clinic, others in their

physicians’ waiting room. One even heard about it first at a baby shower thrown for expectant

mothers at her physician’s clinic.

“Before my doctors visit, someone there said something about a new program that they

were having which is Welcome Baby! A young lady was walking by, and she offered me a

booklet. She said, ‘Would you like to join the Welcome Baby! program?’ She talked about

all the things they would do- that they would actually visit you right after you had your

baby.”

2 Previously, the schedule included a two-week phone call and a 1-2 month home visit but the order of these were

reversed as of spring 2012. 3 All visits conducted by Parent Coaches except where noted.

8

“I heard about it from my cousin. She went to the doctor the day before I did. So the next

day, after hearing about it from her, I talked to the lady [from Welcome Baby!]”

The other half of clients that we spoke to heard about the program at CHMC just after

delivering their baby there. They were visited in-person by a Welcome Baby! hospital liaison.

“I heard about it at the hospital. They told me about the program right there, and I

signed up when my baby was born.”

Mothers’ initial impressions of the program were positive and their motivation to participate

was high, given the support and information they’d gain from participating. Several participants

highlighted the specific allure of a medical professional—the registered nurse—visiting their

home shortly after bringing the baby home from the hospital.

“I was interested because they spoke to me about a nurse that would come visit me at

home, and if I had any questions about my baby’s health, they would be able to help me.”

“It sounded good to have a nurse come up.”

One participant was recruited into the program at CHMC, after delivery, but dropped out

before the 72-hour home visit, and so did not receive that or any subsequent visits through

Welcome Baby!. As noted in the Section B, below, this is one of the largest drop-off points for

clients, so her experiences may provide some insight into factors that contribute to a decision to

stop participating in Welcome Baby!4

“Some lady just walked into my room and told me about the program. She [said] ‘do you

want to sign up for it?’ It sounded good, so I was like ‘Yeah, I’ll sign up for it.’ Then I

was having some problems at home…I was going through some stuff with the baby’s

dad… and I was like, I don’t want to go through it right now, so I just left it. But now,

listening to all you guys [discuss the benefits of Welcome Baby!] I wish I had done it…”

No clients in any of the three focus groups had previously received home visiting services

prior to enrolling in Welcome Baby!. Several participants remarked that nothing like this had

ever been available to them before for their other, older children. For a few of these mothers, the

long time passed since their last pregnancy meant that Welcome Baby! met a particular need for

some refreshers and additional support.

“With my other three older children, they didn’t really have programs where you had a

nurse come out and be interested in what your baby and what you need as a parent.”

“I was so interested in the program because I felt a lot of pressure [when I had] my first

child. I felt incapable of caring for my first child. I [had] asked for help and I didn’t feel

that I received that help with her. But with this program, I wanted to learn more.”

4 Evaluators had hoped to conduct a focus group with “drop outs” from the program, but lack of (or out of date)

contact information for these former clients made this unfeasible.

9

For other participants who were having their first child, the program offered an enticing

offer of much-needed information and support throughout the new experience of pregnancy and

motherhood.

“With this being my first baby, I needed all the information I could get!”

In anticipation of their first visit, mothers generally felt comfortable with the idea of someone

coming into their home, though a few moms felt nervous and uncertain of what to expect from

the visit. However, the warm, friendly and accommodating home visitors quickly allayed any

concern.

“I was a little nervous at first, not knowing what to expect before you meet them. But

when they come out, they’re just so caring and helpful, and showering you with concern

– it’s great.”

“I wasn’t sure how it was going to work out, but after the first visit, I was like ‘Okay, this

is really cool.’”

“The parent coach that would come to visit me would always call me. She was very nice,

and was always available at the time that I could meet. She would ask me, ‘What time is

best for you that I visit?’”

3. The Home Visits

As noted above, Welcome Baby! clients who participated in the focus groups were either current

enrollees in the program or had graduated from the program. All of the women had received

home visits at appropriate engagement points throughout their enrollment, with the exception of

one participant that never received a nurse home visit due to difficulties in communicating by

phone with the nurse. This exceptional experience could be explained by a recent nursing staff

shortage that MCH Access discussed with evaluators during key informant interviews (see

Benatar et al. 2012).

During the 72-hour nurse home visit, clients reported that the nurse assisted them with

troubleshooting various breastfeeding issues, counseling on postpartum depression, and

discussing issues related to the baby’s health.

“We talked about the difference between the baby blues and postpartum depression. I just

had the baby blues—I didn’t go through anything else. So that was good—to help me

distinguish which was which.”

“I was never able to breastfeed my older children while laying down so I would get up at

whatever time and breastfeed them sitting up. So I commented to [the nurse] and

she…went to my room and told me to lie down. She showed me how I needed to lay down

and be safe.”

10

“I told the parent coach that my baby would not stop crying during certain hours of the

night. I told her that we would hold him and comfort him but he would not stop crying.

She told me that if it isn’t colic that he wanted to feel more of mommy. She told me to

hold him touching skin-to-skin. I tried it and that was the way that he would find comfort.

My other children would hear him cry, and they would say, ‘The nurse said that it has to

be skin to skin!’ and they would take off their shirts and hold the baby close to their

skin.”

In home visits with parent coaches, mothers participating in our focus groups reported that

they discussed issues including breastfeeding, child sleeping, diet and nutrition, progress toward

developmental milestones, healthcare needs, educational activities and toys, home safety, and the

family’s need for any services or additional supports.

“At first I was really scared because my son wasn’t latching. She showed me how to deal

with it.”

“We talked about how the baby sleeps….where you’re laying them, are you laying them

on pillows, are there blankets in there, that kind of stuff.”

“My parent coach kept me informed as to what I needed to do with the child and spoke to

me about the development of the baby. She would give me information about what the

baby’s milestones were, what he should be doing at a certain age.”

“My parent coach is helping me because for three months my baby is really

advanced…she’s showing me eight-month-old games to play with him and stuff.”

A key role also played by parent coaches is linking their clients to other programs and

services through referrals. Clients reported benefiting from such assistance in matters related to

maternity leave, childcare, and sanitation services for cockroach infestations.

“There were a lot of roaches in my apartment and she helped me call the city and

advised there was a newborn in the apartment. Sanitation came out to take care of it.”

“I spoke to my home visitor about the fact that my supervisor asked me to go back to

work after my 40 days of maternity leave. There was another program that legally

extends it another 6 weeks and my parent coach gave me a lot of phone numbers to call. I

called my supervisor and he told me I could extend it. So my parent coach helped me very

much.”

Mothers remarked that the home visits often occurred at the right time for providing

information and resources to help address their needs at that point in time—especially during the

first several months of the child’s life.

“The baby goes to get their shots, and the parent coach comes [right] after that. She

asked me how the doctor was, any concerns I have, and what to expect from the shots…”

“The timing of the first one or two visits was really good for me, because she would give

me really good literature. She gave me a little medical book that talks about rashes, gas,

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that kind of thing. It was so on time…when I saw something I was able to look through

that book, and say ‘Okay, well, it’s not that.’”

However, a few mothers were not satisfied with the lack of a home visit between the 3/4-

month and 9-month engagement points, stating that the large 5 to 6 month period between the

two is a “big gap,” especially given the rapid developmental changes that babies experiences

during that time. In particular, they expressed concern about guidance on feeding during this

gap.

“From four to nine months, the baby changes completely. They go from not sitting to

sitting up, eating solids, getting a little more sick, and maybe wanting to learn how to

crawl. Those are big changes.”

The home visitors also provided focus group participants with much-appreciated maternal

attention and support—support that they indicated wasn’t always available elsewhere.

“My parent coach not only helped with the development of the baby but also my needs as

well. It really made me feel extra comfortable and just really, really like somebody was

actually there to help. For my other three children, they didn’t really have programs

where you had nurses come out and be interested in what you needed as a parent. For

most of the time, they focus on the baby, but my coach is always calling me as well to

check up on me if I need anything.”

“My parent coach asks me about how I am dealing with everything, and if I need anyone

to talk to. She was really good about that. If you just want to talk and vent, she’s fine

with that. She offers you a little guidance. She’s really good that way.”

“There was a time when I became very depressed because my husband’s father died and

my husband was very sad. My parent coach helped me very much. She would call me

twice per week and tend to me, ask me how I felt. There was a time when she even prayed

with me in order for me to feel better.”

A striking theme among focus group participants was that their parent coach did not just

assist with mother and baby, but rather took a family-centered approach to include and address

the needs of the broader household.

“My parent coach would always ask me first about how the baby was doing; his health,

his development and any doubts or worries I had. But she would also ask me about

myself, if my husband had any work, how things were going [with him], and how school

was going for my other children.”

“My parent coach talked to my sister about her feelings towards the baby and the

situation changing and bringing a new baby into the environment. That was very

helpful.”

“One time she came to visit and my daughter was in the process of visiting colleges and

touring universities. My parent coach was able to give her some advice. The last time she

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came to visit me she asked me how things were going for my daughter and whether she

had been accepted to the university.”

Welcome Baby! clients described their relationships with their parent coaches as “friends,”

and “confidants.” They all saw the same parent coach throughout the duration of the program.

“You become friends….she is your confidant. We talk about our feelings; how we are

feeling as a mother or other problems. For me, apart from the fact that she helped me

very much with my baby—I felt like I trusted her.”

“I felt extremely comfortable with her.”

Clients reported that they’d call their parent coach between visits if they had questions—and

that their parent coach would often call them to follow-up on information or referrals to other

services and programs—even after the program had ended at 9 months postpartum.

“My parent coach called me last week to give me the phone number to an arts academy

for my children because she saw that my children like instruments. She told me ‘Here is

the number to an academy if your children want to attend.’”

4. Overall Perceptions and Impacts of the Welcome Baby! Program

Overall, Welcome Baby! clients participating in our focus groups were unanimously positive

about the program

“It went over and beyond what I expected….I love the program.”

Clients agreed that empowerment and a sense of confidence in their ability to take care of

their child and family was one of the most useful aspects of their Welcome Baby! home visiting

experiences.

“I think for me, the most helpful part about Welcome Baby!...was seeing for myself that

[my baby] was on target and on point meeting all her milestones and doing everything

she was supposed to do.”

“I would say the program made me a more confident mother and built up my confidence

being a first-time mom. Just knowing everything is going to be hard, but, you know, that I

can do it.”

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Many mothers participating in our focus groups stated that they wish the program would be

extended—to provide home visiting to families past the first nine months of the child’s life.

Some said it would be helpful to receive visits up to the baby’s 12th month, others to 2 years,

and others till the child’s fifth birthday. Clients cited the desire for additional guidance around

their child’s development, support, and resources as reasons for this wish.

“I would like the program to go up till the child is 2 years old… by that time they are

talking and walking. I worry a lot because I see that he is not developing as much as

other children. Those are questions I asked the doctor during my visit- I asked him why.

My other children have been different from him. He said not to worry—that all children

are different. But that is why I would like to have more time with [Welcome Baby!] in

order for them to tell me what is going on.”

The clients’ experiences were so positive that they were eager to spread the word about

Welcome Baby! to others—family, friends, and other community members.

“I have recommended this program to my cousins a lot and they want to come and get

information. This program helps everyone a lot.”

“I wish there was a way that more people [could] find out about the program and know

that it is available. When I had my baby, there were 7 other women who had babies as

well and no one knew about the program. I would like to introduce it to my community.”

5. Community Support for Mothers Receiving Welcome Baby! Home Visiting

When asked about the challenges they face as parents in their communities, clients cited lack of

time, energy, finances, keeping children out of trouble, and making some sacrifices in order to

support and spend time with their children and family.

“I have four kids. It’s tough sometimes, when you’re living paycheck to paycheck, and

you don’t live in a very nice area… You’re paying a lot of rent yet you still got to take

care of what your children need. You need diapers, wipes… That’s overwhelming

sometimes—you don’t know how you’re going to go about the next week. It’s consuming,

depressing, stressful…you got to put on a happy face for your family and just take it one

day at a time.”

“I make the sacrifice of working at night in order to spend more time with him.

Sometimes I only sleep 3 hours and that is hard but I feel good because I am with him all

day long and I get to enjoy him more of the time.”

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Clients generally agreed that they felt minimal levels of support for children and families in

their communities. In substantiating this, they cited the lack of safe parks, shortage of nearby and

accessible services—particularly childcare—and safety concerns related to crime and violence.

“I don’t know what they really have as far as support in my area. I mean, we don’t even

have a decent park.”

“When the parent coaches came to talk to us, they would talk about childcare for

children, and classes. But those are not close to our area, where we can travel to. They

are very far away. It is hard to get to it, and even applying to those places is hard too.”

“We have a park close by, but it’s infested with gang members. The last time we were

there, I took my kids to the free activities there—baseball, karate, basketball—and

someone got stabbed while my kids were in karate. We couldn’t get out of the park,

because you had this dead body laying there.”

Clients’ wish lists for their community included having more safe parks, classes for families,

and childcare services.

“I would like to have childcare for infants.”

“I would like more services and activities so the children can learn things. And classes

for fathers.”

“I would like to have parks available.”

When asked about their familiarity with the broader Best Start LA initiative, a total of five

parents (out of our total sample of 31) had heard about the community investment. One of these

parents had attended a parent engagement event in Metro LA held at her child’s school. Asked to

describe Best Start in their own words, these clients provided a range of different responses:

“Best Start LA is to help the community get more parks, to get more daycares, to help the

kids, and to be more focused.”

“When I went to the parent engagement event for Best Start LA at the school, they talked

about parks, daycares, clinics, hospitals.”

“The parent coach that went to visit me, she talked about Best Start LA. It is a program

where they help the children develop better.”

A greater number of parents had heard of First 5 LA, the agency sponsoring Best Start LA.

A total of nine parents were familiar with it and had heard about it from commercials on TV,

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advertisements in their grocery store, or at their clinics. Asked to describe what they know about

First 5 LA in their own words, these clients stated:

“First 5 LA mainly focuses on the first five years of the child’s life, their overall

development, what they should be doing, what you should do as parents to encourage

them. I heard a lot about it, and I’m like ‘I’m for it. I’m for First 5.”

“I’ve just seen advertisements where they give you really good ideas about making the

grocery store a learning experience for the babies.”

“First 5 LA talks about how to eat better – to eat more fruits and vegetables.”

B. What Do Home Visitors Say About Serving Families under Best Start LA?

To implement the Welcome Baby! home visiting component of Best Start LA, MCH Access

relies on staff who work in a variety of capacities. These include:

Level 3 team supervisors, who carry their own caseloads while coordinating and

overseeing the work of the rest of the team;

Level 2 parent coaches, who work mostly in the field, visiting mothers prenatally and

postpartum;

Level 1 parent coaches (who are paraprofessional promotoras) who conduct home visits

but also concentrate on outreach, intake, and referral to other parent coaches;

Registered nurses who conduct all 72-hour postpartum home visits;

Outreach specialists who focus on conducting outreach and recruitment; and

Hospital liaisons who work at California Hospital to recruit new mothers at the time of

delivery

With several years of experience under its belt, MCH Access has reached a comfortable

equilibrium with the overall size of its staff and the model through which they are deployed. Our

findings from a focus group with a sample of these staff are summarized below.

1. Background and qualifications of Welcome Baby! home visitors

Of MCH Access’ 19 home visitor staff, 10 participated in our focus group, including one nurse,

one outreach specialist, seven parent coaches, and one hospital liaison. Four had been with the

Welcome Baby! program for over two years, five for between 1 and 2 years, and two for less than

one year. Several of the participants had participated in focus groups and interviews during

previous years’ site visits for the Best Start LA Evaluation. Roughly half of the visitors with

whom we spoke had received Bachelor’s degrees from four-year colleges, and some had

attended or completed studies at the graduate school level. (Psychology, sociology, child and

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family therapy, social work, and community health were among the disciplines that home

visitors had studied.) All home visitors were bilingual English/Spanish speakers.

Paraprofessional Parent Coaches (PC I) see lower-risk clients, while the BA-level Parent

Coaches (PC II) are typically assigned the more high risk families. In general parent coaches

visit between 5 and 10 families a week.

2. Training for Welcome Baby!

In the Evaluation’s Year 1 Focus Groups, discussions with home visitors revealed that they were

universally satisfied by the range of content covered in their training, and felt that it had prepared

them well for their work with clients. Home visitors at the time stated that their training included

a two-month intensive classroom regimen, followed by hands-on shadowing of home visits.

Topics covered in the classroom training included substantive areas such as maternal and child

health, child development, effective child rearing practices, home and environmental safety,

maternal depression, domestic violence. Home visitors also underwent Certified Lactation

Educator training. They developed skills including: communication, reflective listening,

counseling, and motivational interviewing skills (Hill and Adams 2011).

When asked about training in this year’s focus group, home visitors reported that the more

recently added staff have received less intensive classroom training than the original group of

home visitors, but more emphasis on shadowing and “in the field” experiences. Home visitors

attributed this difference to the fact that, in its early stages, the program was not in full swing in

terms of caseload, resulting in more time and flexibility for intensive classroom training.

“Those of us that came in the first and second cohort, our training was really, really

intensive. It was intensive because, at that time, we weren’t seeing [as many] clients, so I

think it was a little bit different. We had time to do that intensive training. But now that

the program is in full swing and we have a client base, it’s kind of hard to have intensive

training like that still.”

Home visitors continued to report that that they felt prepared by this training for their work,

and particularly appreciated the hands-on training and shadowing of other parent coaches’ home

visits, and the understanding of Welcome Baby!’s client-centered approach that it affords.

“It is taking what you learn and incorporating it; working with the client. It’s like, okay,

this is the book knowledge, but when you get to the home and you see the environment

and understand the challenges the client may have, or questions that they have, it’s you

engaging from what they know and then you add in your common sense with the book

knowledge. It’s about being client -centered. We have our protocols, and we have things

that we need to address at each different engagement point, but a lot of times, it’s just

doing a needs assessment.”

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3. Outreach and recruitment

In the first several years of the program, outreach and recruitment for Welcome Baby! was the

responsibility of Level I parent coach (PC I) staff. Given rising caseloads and increasingly over-

stretched parent coaches, and the perception that a dedicated outreach staff would benefit

recruitment, two new Outreach Specialist positions were created in Spring 2011 to take on this

role. One outreach specialist participated in our focus group. As of April 2012, PC I staff no

longer conduct outreach. The Outreach Specialist with whom we spoke said that she focused

exclusively on prenatal outreach at provider clinic sites and California Hospital Medical Center

(CHMC). This reflects the increased commitment by Welcome Baby! to recruit clients in the

prenatal time period.

From our focus group, we learned that the Outreach Specialist began her prenatal recruitment

work by visiting provider clinics (clinics that deliver at CHMC) at their busiest times, or at

designated “baby shower” events for expecting patients at large community health clinics. When

visiting these clinics, she spoke to prospective clients in the waiting rooms, before and after they

saw their doctors. However, motivated by the desire to reach a broader audience and recruit

prospective clients more efficiently, Welcome Baby! leadership began considering alternative

outreach strategies. Building on their partnership with CHMC as the designated birthing hospital

for Welcome Baby!, the Outreach Specialist started working more closely with the hospital’s

outreach department. This CHMC Outreach Department has relationships with all of the 100

providers who have delivery privileges at CHMC, giving Welcome Baby! access to this larger

network of relationships.

“The CHMC Outreach Department does a lot of heavy outreach with all of the providers.

They reach all of the providers that we’re not able to reach because we don’t have the

staff needed to cover all of them. There are approximately 100 providers that deliver at

CHMC.”

At first, this new partnership involved working together at community health fairs, but later

expanded to include a Welcome Baby! presence at CHMC hospital tours for expectant mothers.

These hospital tours are an opportunity for the expectant parents to visit the hospital to check out

the delivery room and ask questions. The women reached are at various stages of their

pregnancies—some are very early in their pregnancy, while others are very close to their

delivery dates. Overall, she estimated that most are in their late-second or third trimester at the

time of the tour.

This new outreach strategy was considered a tremendous success by MCH Access staff,

given the efficiency, the large audience reached, and reduced follow-up it typically involved.

Outreach staff spend less time out in the field, leaving them more time to do the requisite

“intake” calls with those who are interested in enrolling in the program.

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“It’s time efficient, and it is productive, in the sense that you get big groups. [Doing

hospital tours requires spending less time being out of the field] and leaves more time for

“intake” – making the calls and doing actual intake with clients. And you definitely want

to reach them- you don’t want to wait too long before you contact them because then

you’ve missed that opportunity.”

Outreach staff reported that most women on these tours sign up; staff estimated that they are

able to sign up about 90 percent of women with whom they are able to directly speak.

“For the most part, everyone in the group signs up and is interested in the program.

There’s a couple of people that are on the fence; that are borderline, and they mark

“maybe.” We get very few “no’s.”

“Usually, if they pick up the phone, they sign up.”

In addition to this successful new outreach strategy, the Outreach Specialist said that she still

attends the “baby shower” events in the community, but most of her efforts are now focused on

the hospital tour partnership.

“We are still going out to the clinics for the baby showers, because some of our biggest

partners-community health clinics-they organize baby showers for their prenatal patients

and they are usually good groups. We find that that’s a great time to reach them; it’s the

perfect opportunity to offer them the program.”

When outreach and home visiting staff were asked about the responses of prospective clients

to the program, they said “you get a whole range of feelings.” Some mothers’ faces brighten up,

as they are clearly excited about the program and often sign up immediately. Others are reported

to be more hesitant, perhaps because of the prospect of a stranger coming into their home, or

perhaps thinking that outreach staff are representatives of a government agency. Others are

shocked that it’s free, and think that there must be a catch, that they will sign up but end up

getting charged at the hospital.

“I think what I’ve gotten most from those interactions is, ‘It’s free?!’ They can’t believe

it’s free and we go visit them in their house. They always think there’s a catch, like- ‘how

is this going to come back to me? How is my kid going to be charged for this? Or are

they going to charge me at the hospital?’ I think it’s really hard for them to believe that

there’s this person that’s trying to help, and it’s free… it’s just like ‘No, it’s too good to

be true,’ pretty much.”

A challenge that the Welcome Baby! program has faced is determining the appropriate

number of clients to assign to each parent coach, especially given the uneven, staggered spacing

of the program’s engagement points.

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“We are not looking at it in terms of caseloads, but visits. If you count just caseloads,

there may be gaps where you’re carrying a case but the visit isn’t happening. So, we have

shifted to looking at visits: we forecast the month’s visits for each parent coach.”

Parent coaches reported that they conduct between eight and twelve home visits each week.

The nurse reported her workload to be more variable – given that many clients who are lost to

follow-up between enrollment in the program at CHMC and the 72-hour postpartum nurse home

visit. The program has been short one nurse since December 2011, and since then the nurses

have been overstretched, and have had to prioritize clients based on their urgency.

“We have been pretty inundated… we’re kind of at the point of seeing the emergency

ones first. If they’re having issues, we try and see them first and then just prioritize from

there. It can be anywhere from 8 to 15 visits a week. It just depends.”

When asked to compare their workload at the time of our focus group compared to our last

round in 2010, parent coaches unanimously agreed that they are much busier now. One coach

attributed part of this to the protocol’s new home visit at two weeks postpartum (which, before

spring 2012, had been a phone call), and to the fact that this home visit often results in more

urgency to get out to see the client as soon as possible.

“Since [we added that visit], it’s been pretty solid, where a lot of people have signed up

for the program prenatally, and also at the hospital, and we have been following through

on all of the engagement points. It was like a switch flipped.”

Several home visitors felt so busy that they were occasionally compromising quality for

quantity, in that they weren’t able to spend as much time with each client as they had been in the

early stages of the program.

“We’ve had to say to management, ‘Either it’s going to be about volume and numbers, or

it’s going to be about quality.’ I can easily do 5 visits in a day if you just want me to

spend 30 minutes with each client….but that’s not going to be quality. We’re not going to

retain clients like that. For the nurse home visit, our visits are probably a little longer

because we do walk in during a crisis moment. So you are always cognizant of the time in

the back of your head. But you know that you have to come there, meet the client where

they are. If it takes you more than an hour, then it takes you more than an hour.”

“It seems like before, Welcome Baby! was operating kind of like it was an intensive

program with referrals and case management. The caseloads were smaller. But now,

there has been a shift – almost in the culture of the program.”

While home visitors all agreed that there had been such a shift, some disagreed and felt that

quality was not being compromised despite their larger caseloads, especially given their

emphasis on having a client-centered, empowerment-driven approach.

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“Personally, I don’t feel like it is taking away quality. It’s about empowering our clients,

because we don’t want to keep doing a lot of the extra work that we were doing before. I

don’t think it needs to take away quality… I would say that our high-risk clients definitely

still get that extra attention. It may not be with additional visits, just a phone call.”

“Now, I’m more comfortable with the information I’m giving. I have more knowledge

now [than I did when I first started being a parent coach]. I don’t have to always run

back and look at the information- there’s less back and forth.”

“We make sure that we give them the tools that they need to move forward after we’re

gone. With breastfeeding, I’ll show them how to do it, but then I need them to return the

demonstration, because I’m not going to be standing there holding their breast, from now

on. They need to be able to do it themselves. The more that we are able to empower them,

that is what keeps the quality….if they feel like they can’t go on without you, that means

you didn’t empower them- they need to feel confident in being able to take care of their

babies themselves.”

4. Year 3 Changes to the Welcome Baby! Model

As mentioned above, the two week postpartum home visit is a new addition to the Welcome

Baby! protocol. Previously, there had been a two-week postpartum phone call and a 1-2 months

postpartum home visit, which represented the first in-person home visit by the parent coach

(after having first been visited by the nurse at 72-hours postpartum). With this change, clients are

instead visited at two weeks postpartum, and receive a phone call at 1-2 months postpartum. This

change took effect in February 2012. In our last round of focus groups, home visitors had

identified the need for this change and this round, they were pleased that the change had been

implemented.

“Before, we did a phone call, and it was just somebody calling you saying ‘Hey, I’m X,

I’m your parent coach.’ And then the mom doesn’t see you again until her kid is two

months old. By then, she’s forgotten all about you.”

Home visitors felt that this change improved the continuity of their care and the “hand-off”

from the nurse to the parent coach, as well as the relationship between the client and their parent

coach. The opportunity to directly connect with clients early on led home visitors to believe that

they’d develop greater trust and rapport with the clients.

“It seems that when I go out for the 2 week visit, they’re more open to talk about what’s

going on and if they need help, whereas I felt like on the phone it was different… It just

feels like you build more rapport with the client.”

“And when you make the call at 1-2 months, they’re more eager to talk to you, and you

know what’s going on…”

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Home visitors were hopeful that this change would also improve retention through the entire

postpartum period. However, since it is a relatively recent change, there is not yet evidence to

support this.

“When the nurse goes into the home at 72-hours postpartum, it’s a crisis moment

because the mom has just come home from the hospital. Her nipples are sore and

bleeding, the baby is crying, and mom’s clueless as to what to do. For the nurse to go in

to do that visit when it’s a crisis moment, and then the parent coach to come right behind

us at two weeks postpartum to follow up, I think it really does something for the

continuity of care we’re providing, and it helps to cultivate that relationship and retain

those clients. I think we’ll see…that clients will feel more connected and more inclined to

remain in the program for the entire nine months.”

“Anecdotally speaking, I think it’s fair to say that as a nurse, for me to come in and can

give them the support right when they’ve come home, and I can say, ‘Your parent

coach…is going to call you next week to set up an appointment to come out and see your

baby when your baby is 2 weeks old,’ I think that goes a long way in helping us retain

these clients. But it’s too early right now to say if that’s helping.”

The switch to a two-week visit also means that clients have three engagement points with

Welcome Baby! during the first month of the child’s life: the hospital visit, just after delivery, by

the hospital liaison; the 72-hour nurse home visit; and the two-week parent coach home visit.

Given that the first month of a child’s life is critically important for breastfeeding, home visitors

felt very positively about this much interaction.

“It helps us too, because, in the hospital we can tell them they will have three visits in the

baby’s first month. That is prime time for visits… One of the biggest things that we

support mommies with is breast feeding. Typically, that first month is when things are

either going really well or they’re going really wrong. So to have three people from

Welcome Baby! support them with breastfeeding in the first month of the program, I think

that’s going to go a long way.”

“There was one client we visited in the first couple of weeks. We noticed there were a lot

of breastfeeding issues which she did have the nurse to assist her with but there were

additional things she needed help with. She said ‘I am going to go to WIC to see if I can

follow up on these issues…’ but we just did everything during the first. She avoided

having to go to WIC and got help with breastfeeding issues, which was a big benefit to

her – and she didn’t have to wait for the second month.”

Home visitors reported that the content of the home visits has not changed since our last site

visit.

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5. Changes to the Populations Served

Welcome Baby! is a universal home visitation model, meaning that it is offered to every woman,

regardless of socioeconomic status, who resides within a five mile radius of CHMC. The

surrounding urban areas have evolved over time. When asked about any changes over time in the

types of clients they are seeing, home visitors didn’t point to any specific changes in the

community itself, but did highlight that they see a wide range of family circumstances and

perhaps a broadening of that range over time.

“This program enrolls everybody, no matter what their socioeconomic status is. We had

a set of parents who are attorneys who live in a sky rise loft, where you’re saying ‘Whoa,

this is really nice.’ Then we also have a client that is living in a converted garage with 15

people living almost in squalor. Then we have those clients that are right in the middle.

We enroll such a variety of women and families.”

“I think the people who are accepting the program; the people who are joining us are

starting to broaden. I think we’re starting to see more professional people join our

program… I think that’s a big deal because I think historically programs like this are

accepted by people who are of lower socioeconomic status. I have one client I went to see

and I asked her if she was receiving WIC, and she said ‘What’s WIC?’”

Home visitors felt that this diversity of clients enrolling in the program was “powerful,”

“interesting,” and speaks to the program’s positive image and the results of word-of-mouth

recommendations. In fact, home visitors noted that after three years, they’ve started to see repeat

clients and referrals in the program.

“We’re also starting to get a lot of repeat clients, and referrals… I got assigned a case

last year and when I pulled up to the house, I was like ‘This is very familiar.’ When I

walked in the door, a young lady answered the door and I asked ‘Have I been here

before?’ She said, ‘Yeah, you came to see me last year. I had a baby.’ It was her little

sister I was there to see this time. There are a lot of families telling each other about the

program, and we’re getting referrals that way.”

Such word-of-mouth referrals seemed to make home visitors’ job easier; a positive

recommendation paves the way for a client to have more trust in the home visitor from the start.

“I think anytime you have word-of-mouth that’s positive, it always makes things easier,

because – if a friend refers someone to me to do work on my house and they did a good

job for her, I’m going to have a little bit more faith in them than if I just cold call them

out of a phone book.”

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6. Retention Challenges

The highest rate of clients “lost to follow-up” continues to be for those clients that enroll at the

hospital and drop out of the program before the 72-hour nurse home visit. (MCH Access

supervisors reported that about 18 percent of mothers recruited at the hospital drop out of the

program.) We previously heard from home visitors in the project’s first round of focus groups

that this was the most challenging time point for retention (Hill et al., 2011, Hill & Adams,

2011). When asked about the reasons for this drop-off, home visitors said that it’s often young

mothers that live with their own mothers and the perception that these young mothers don’t want

a stranger coming into their home. Other clients may say they’re too busy, or their phone

numbers are disconnected, or the address they gave isn’t where they are actually residing and

happens to be outside of the program’s catchment area.

“Normally, it’s my younger mommies, who I met at the hospital. Their mother, who they

live with, didn’t know that they signed up [for Welcome Baby!]. Their mother is like, ‘I

don’t want anybody coming into my home.’” So when we call to make the visit, they’re

like ‘Oh, never mind, I changed my mind.’ They [may] tell you ‘My mom doesn’t want me

to participate.’”

“When a client signs up in the hospital- they give a different address from where they

actually live. When I try to get a hold of them, they give me a different address – some of

those are out of our area [so] they can’t participate in the program.”

“We have a very transient population whose phones are [shut] off from one minute to the

next. So for the nurse home visit, if they enrolled at the hospital and 3 days later I call

and their phone is disconnected, there’s not a whole lot for me to do but just tell the

parent coach. The nurse client volume is so high, we don’t have the time to chase clients

like that.”

Home visitors indicated that pitching the program to prospective clients was challenging to

do at the hospital after prospective clients have just delivered their baby, and that that might also

play a factor in the large drop-out rate for those clients. They suggested that this setting might

not be ideal for recruitment.

“It’s hard for them to understand exactly what it is at first, [because] it’s a very hard

program to explain with just our talking points.”

“You’re trying to explain something to somebody who has just had a baby, and what

you’re telling them is not even going in – they’re not processing it. I think that’s why we

have so much dropout [after] the hospital. I attribute it to baby brain…I know the

hospital liaisons do a really good job of explaining our program, but when we call,

they’re like ‘Well, who are you? What, what is this program about again?’”

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To counteract this challenge, home visitors emphasized the importance of their push to

recruit clients prenatally. This strategy has enabled them to demonstrate the benefits of the

program early on, and to establish a relationship with the parent coach before the baby is born.

“If you can lay the foundation, it makes building the rest of the house easier. If we enroll

them at the hospital, the foundation is just being laid and it’s a really thin layer. But

when we enroll them prenatally, we have a big foundation.”

In contrasting their prenatally-recruited clients with the hospital recruits, home visitors said

that the prenatal clients proactively engage with their parent coaches immediately after the baby

is brought home from the hospital, or in one client’s case when they were in labor and en route to

the hospital. Indeed, MCH Access supervisors reported that half as many prenatally-recruited

mothers drop out of Welcome Baby! as do hospital-recruited mothers—9 percent vs. 18 percent.

“With the prenatal clients, a lot of them tend to call as soon as they get home [from the

hospital]. They say, when is the nurse coming?’”

“One client called her parent coach on the way to the hospital and said, ‘I’m in labor!’”

The second most common time for drop-outs occurs between the 3-4 month and 9-month

home visit. This four to five month period continues to be a gap that the home visitors previously

identified in the Welcome Baby! model (Hill & Adams 2011). This gap—which covers critical

stages of the infants’ development, including crawling and walking, and starting solids—is a

source of frustration for home visitors.

“Think about the course of the clients’ relationship with the program up until the four-

month point. If it was a prenatal client, they enroll prenatally and were exposed to the

outreach specialist. They then were exposed to their parent coach. Then they saw the

hospital liaison. Then they saw a nurse. Then they saw their parent coach again- and two

more times after that. All that happened by the time the baby was four months old. Then

we said ‘Oops, never mind, we won’t see you again until your baby is nine months old.’

We went from seeing you all the time to not seeing you at all.”

“There is so much that happens between four and nine months. The child becomes a

whole different person. The mother becomes a whole different person. I think that’s

something that is really lacking from this program. It is something that I think needs to

be reevaluated.”

Home visitors often lose contact with families in that time, or get calls from clients in that

window asking ‘When are you coming again?’ or questions about starting solids.

“They are always calling; they have a lot of questions about six months and starting

solids.”

25

The visitors said that they often give as much information as possible in the 3-4 month visit,

because they know this might be the last time they’ll see them if they can’t get reach them again.

This includes information about the transition to solids feeding.

“I find that a lot of our clients are giving the children solids earlier than six months

because they have the information already… versus waiting and doing a visit closer to 6

months – they’d get the information and won’t start giving the baby solids as early.”

7. Rewards and challenges

Welcome Baby! home visitors found their work to be highly rewarding, particularly around their

clients’ appreciation for their work. Home visitors also found the empowerment and success

stories of clients to be a particularly gratifying aspect of their job.

When asked to identify any other challenges associated with their work, home visitors

identified three main challenges. First, they wished for Welcome Baby! to be expanded to a

larger geographic area, so that they could accept more clients. Second, they desired a mental

health component for the program, given that they find referrals to mental health services some

of the most challenging to accomplish, particularly due to recent cuts for adult mental health

services in California. Finally, home visitors revealed that taking care of their own mental and

emotional health was a challenge given the intensity of their work.

C. What Do Community Stakeholders Say about Best Start LA?

Positive change at the community level is an important goal of the Best Start LA investment. To

spur such change, community mobilization and place-based strategies are supported by First 5

LA through funding of a “lead entity” and a group that specializes in Community Based Action

Research (CBAR) who together work to mobilize community members, facilitate their

identification of needs in their neighborhoods, and to promote strategies and services to address

those needs. In Metro LA, Para Los Niños (PLN) is the lead entity and Special Service for

Groups (SSG) is facilitating the CBAR process.

As described in this evaluation’s case study reports, PLN initially got off to a slow start

during its first year, but quickly learned that active engagement of parents in the community was

critical for successful mobilization (Hill et al. 2011; Hill and Benatar, 2011). A Community

Guidance Body (CGB) was eventually formed, charged with leading the development of

strategies for community action. Over time, the CGB created four task forces to focus their

various mobilization efforts, including the 1) Parent Task Force, 2) CBAR Task Force, 3)

Communications Task Force, and 4) Training and Technical Assistance Task Force. The second

year of implementation culminated in the funding of 17 “collaborative partner grants” to

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community organizations for short term, shovel-ready projects, providing a first step to

community strategies that had been engaged primarily in “process” up to that point (Hill et al.

2011). A second round of Collaborative Partner Grants was funded during the third year of the

investment, and awards were announced in February 2012 (Benatar et al. 2012). As described in

the case studies, PLN eventually made a conscious move to step back and give the CGB center

stage, describing its role as providing logistical support to the CGB, facilitating community

organization and relationship building between the CGB and First 5 LA. In addition, PLN has

worked with the CGB on the development of its new Community Plan, a requirement introduced

by F5LA in May 2011 which entails specifying activities that the CGB plans to implement.

One goal of this evaluation’s focus groups was to speak directly with members of the Metro

LA community to learn whether they had witnessed or felt the effects of Best Start LA’s

investment. Given delays in Metro LA’s implementation during year one, however, the project

decided that the best way to approach this task was to convene a focus group comprising

members of the CGB—representatives of the community that had stepped forward to be part of

the mobilization effort—to hear more about their early efforts. For this second round of focus

groups, we again met with members of the CGB to see how, and how well, community

mobilization was progressing. In addition, we conducted a focus group with representatives of

the Collaborative Partner Grantees to gain additional insights into their experiences working with

Best Start LA and implementing targeted community-improvement projects. The results of these

two focus groups are presented below.

Focus Group with Community Guidance Body Members

PLN officials estimate that, as of spring 2012, there were about 50 members of the CGB,

including 15 parents; of these, about 30 can be considered “active” participants in the body.

Eleven of these CGB members joined us for our focus group. Five were parents, including the

co-chair of the Parent Task Force, and the remainder were representatives of a variety of

agencies and organizations in Metro LA, including a not-for-profit science and education center,

a Healthy Start agency, a group that targets education and outreach to disadvantaged families

(particularly Central American and Mexican immigrant families), a firm involved in worksite

wellness and health education, a speech and hearing clinic, and a community-based multi-service

agency. Together, this group brought a diverse range of perspectives to the conversation.

1. Strengths and weaknesses of the Metro LA community

After introductions, the focus group began with a discussion of the Metro LA pilot community

and its strengths and weaknesses. Generally, participants believed that the community was

undergoing considerable change—some positive, some negative.

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“There are more Latino people and also more low income. It is ever changing…a lot of

culture…our community is very diverse.”

“You have more choices as far as education goes… There are a lot of charter schools

popping out in the area and it is not just public schools.”

“I have seen a very positive impact as far as parents becoming leaders and trying to take

more charge of their own community.”

“The numbers of children here are unbelievable! You walk along and you can see in

many places mothers with little children…”

“The other day I was walking with my children…and [my son] said, ‘Oh Mommy, there

is a lot of trash here! Why do people throw it here?’ That made me think that while

there are things I like in my community…there are also things that I don’t like.”

“Because of development…we have land owners kicking families out, renovating and

trying to get students or whoever can afford higher rents… A lot of communities are

being lost…”

2. How stakeholders got involved with Best Start LA

When asked how they became aware of and involved with Best Start LA, most CGB members

described how they were recruited by PLN or other members of the CGB, illustrating the active

outreach to the community that was a goal of the lead entity and the CGB.

“I got involved because a health promotora came to our group…and gave us

information. She told us…one of the goals is that children stay healthy…and that they

are ready for kindergarten…that this organization can give us more opportunities.”

“I found out through an assistant director [at PLN]… She was in different places,

getting people together and I was very excited.”

3. Major activities of the CBG over the last year

The bulk of our conversation with CGB members focused on activities they’ve been engaged in

over the last year-and-one-half, since our first focus group. Participants described very positive

developments regarding parent involvement, task force formation, and Collaborative Partner

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Grant projects, but also unfortunate dynamics surrounding continued disruptive leadership

changes at PLN, and increasingly bureaucratic oversight by F5LA that some felt was stifling

creativity and progress.

“Well, since the last focus group, a couple of things have taken off. One…is that there

are more parents involved. For any project that is discussed, it really needs to be rooted

in the parents and the community which is the driving factor.”

“We were able to recruit more members and some members are more active, as well.

And that’s good, [because] at the beginning…it was the same people that talked over and

over and over and over again. But not now.”

“Right now in the Parents Task Force, we are organizing a summit…to showcase our

activities and hold workshops for parent capacity building.”

“We are working on the goals that they are born healthy, ready for school, far from the

reach of abuse and negligence… We are planning to put together a fair, this will be the

second one, with resources for children zero to five so they can be ready to go to

kindergarten…”

“We have done two rounds now of granting…and some really cool programs have been

developed.”

“With the approval we have received from F5LA, I am able to bring workshops from

other organizations…every Thursday… Right now we have the diabetes workshop…and

we involve children so they can have a healthy weight. This week, we will be having

another workshop on nutrition…”

“Even though it has been great to have the collaborative projects…the first one was only

3 months, so it was very hectic for us as an organization. I had three different projects at

my school, so trying to balance those…all at once and trying to meet the deadline was

very hectic. But in the end, those were marvelous projects…and a lot of community

members were able to benefit from it.”

“But there seems to have been a layer of bureaucracy that has been added…we are

working through it…but that new dimension I think slows [us] down.”

“It seems like there is so much paperwork and the logistic procedures that we have to go

through…before we can actually get approvals and funding to start some of these

projects…it is a little frustrating I would say.”

29

“If we are talking about the F5LA coming onboard…I could be wrong, but I think their

reputation is one of having more control…and oversight, which personally I think [is] a

mistake because…there needs to be the trust from F5LA…”

“I have even felt disrespected… They have failed to be professional in deciding on

approval of projects. [They] review the proposal…[ask] for things to be changed…30

days go by and then they want to change another line from the proposal. This is not a

game, I do not understand what is going on with them.”

“And this Community Plan…they said they are going to give us a template that we can fit

in our goals and our ideas…[but] it feels a little weird to say our words in their boxes

and it is kind of hard to fit them in, so…that is the frustration we had…”

“It is now like they want every community to have to fit in the same box and I think if they

went back to their original goal of the community…which knows best where the

resources should go and how they should be implemented and who should do it…I think

it would be successful.”

“I started feeling like, ‘Okay, well, they are going to tell us how to do things now.’ It

kind of feels more controlled, more scripted…more top down.”

“The other thing was that we had three director changes [at PLN]…and for a while they

didn’t have anyone…[that has] slowed things down as well.”

4. Overarching views on progress to date

To close, participants were asked to reflect on the last year or two and share their concluding

observations about the work they had been doing and any lessons they had learned about

community mobilization. Despite ups and downs, the CGB members were mostly positive about

the progress they’ve made and the process they’ve followed.

“I feel that it is mostly positive. I sense that a lot of our organizations have worked

together [like] they have never done so before… The grant process was not the best…but

it has been very positive in general…”

“The parents have pulled together in ways they weren’t pulling together before, so that is

very positive.”

30

“Yes, there are positive things…we have worked together…the parents have been taken

into consideration from the beginning and we have become involved little by little…

Things are not right for the things we talked about, but I believe that it is very positive

that the parents have been able to take a place at this table, in this space, and been able

to work on those things that we know need help in the community.”

Focus Group with Collaborative Partner Grantees

Representatives of seven agencies that received Collaborative Partner Grants participated in our

focus group. These individuals worked for very diverse organizations, including a literacy

project for Latino populations, a multi-service community agency, a community housing project,

a Head Start agency, a parenting education organization, and a land trust working to bring parks

and gardens to disadvantaged communities. Our conversation focused primarily on the projects

they implemented with F5LA support, their impressions on the extent to which families were

taking advantage of and benefiting from their projects, the process of grant making that they each

completed to participate in the Collaborative Partner program, and their overall impressions of

Best Start LA.

1. Goals of the Collaborative Partner Grant projects

Discussion initially involved participants sharing stories about the projects they developed and

implemented under the Collaborative Partner Grants. Some examples of these projects are

summarized below in the words of participants.

“We applied for funding to build a “tot lot” within a park and also to restore a central

area of the park that is a grassy area that gets heavily used… Our approach is to do

what we call ‘community build days’ that involve members of the community and creates

more ownership by the community…”

“We had funding for three projects [at our housing project]. One was called

‘maintaining healthy weight in young children’…and our promotoras presented a great

curriculum for nutrition education. They went door to door in Pico Union and South

LA…where there is a lot of lack of information about nutrition… The second was called

‘la hora del te’ which is a stress management curriculum, and we targeted [both]

grandparents and parents who take care of young children… We talked about what

causes stress, what can you do to release stress…and so we did a lot of exercises like

breathing…journaling… The third was a parenting group…and so promotoras taught

[parents] how to do interactions with their kids…”

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“We were funded for…a parent institute. We had 3 tracks…one was focused on child

abuse prevention… The other was nutrition, you know, shopping and going to the

grocery…and actually cooking healthy…we worked with promotoras. The third was a

computer literacy class, and the idea was for the parents to become familiar with

resources and how to use…the Internet and how to get services for their

children…especially ages zero to five… A lot of them had never been in front of a

computer, so that was kind of tough…but also very productive. The parents, I think, liked

it very much.”

2. Challenges with project implementation

Participants spoke at length about the challenges surrounding implementation of their projects,

and focused primarily on the short, three-month period that was provided for project completion.

“Having a three-month turnaround…felt very oppressive. I mean, they had the money

for the whole year, so why was it a three-month turnaround? It made you wonder, was it

really about the community?”

“For us it was just the time…[we] didn’t have enough time… We had a deadline…where

we felt a lot of pressure to get everything done at the same time. And that pressure

carried over to the parents, as well…”

“We really didn’t have time to do the sort of building that these projects need…I mean, it

wasn’t a community change model… It was ‘come in and do a service and leave,’ you

know?”

“I’m also a member of the CGB and…I have strong opinions about this… We’ve been

through four directors [at PLN] and all that transition…and indecision…leads to three

month [projects] when it should have been at least a year.”

“We’re all developing programs to meet the funding requirements… I think there needs

to be a real discussion around…just providing general operating support to

organizations that are doing good work around the target population, and not doing

[short term] grants or project grants that require this level of capacity.”

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3. Families’ participation in and responses to community projects

Despite timing challenges, projects enjoyed strong participation and were highly valued by

families, as perceived by grantees.

“I think it went above [my expectations]. One of the things that resonates is that…when

you put it out there, people are hungry to participate…”

“We could have been providing parenting classes all year! I’m really pleased that

there’s a real [demand] for nonviolence in the community, a real need to break the cycles

of violence in the community…”

“I think we were ambitious with what we wrote…but had only three months to find

[parents] and cultivate their interest. I think we had hopes of having 15 or 20…and in

actuality we came in around 10.”

“We asked for $45,000 and got $18,000…and we had 45 days to do something. We were

able to enroll 16 parents…so it was really quite good. We had one gentleman who has a

three-year-old boy. He was learning how to write his letters and he would make room on

his dining room table, and his little boy would come and they would practice their letters

together… [It was] a beautiful story…”

4. Familiarity with the broader Best Start LA investment

Participants were asked about their impressions of the Best Start LA investment, beyond the

Collaborative Partner Grant process. Since they were employees of community-based agencies,

these professionals generally were aware of BSLA, and some had positive views. But several

also still held strong, hurt feelings over the controversy that surrounded the initial launch of the

place-based investment.

“I remember the initial meeting at First 5 LA…so we [from the agency that did not win

the Lead Entity contract] were part of that whole political thing from the beginning…”

“One of the things that frustrates me… is that a lot of different entities are already

working in this community… It [the award to PLN] kind of minimized a lot of the work

that we were already doing…at least that’s how it felt…”

“The organizations that are already existing for so many years trying to make a positive

impact, not a change… The positive impact on the community was kind of pushed to the

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side…. But now that we’re involved, I think we have the opportunity to go back and do a

lot of what we want to see…”

“I think any kind of funder-led place-based initiative is confusing the people… It

narrows opportunities for partnership…and excludes organizations or work that is

already naturally engaged... Ultimately, it’s a funder-led initiative, not a community-led

initiative.”

“Still, the beautiful thing…is that I feel like I’ve built some really great relationships…”

5. Overarching views on the Collaborative Partner Grant process

In conclusion, participants were asked to share final thoughts about their involvement, as well as

lessons learned and advice for First 5 LA about future work in the community.

“Oh, we’re really grateful to have had the money to be able to provide the services. I

mean, we wouldn’t have been able to provide them with the budget…so we’re grateful for

that.”

“We’ve got five months this time around, so that’s better. But why couldn’t we have a

full year to work with? I still don’t quite understand that…”

“In terms of creating new programs and something new [for the grant applications], I

guess we would have liked to just, you know, fund the programs that we already had, but

I actually brought some new ideas and I think that was actually interesting…”

“Ours was already an existing program, so we didn’t have to change the curriculum, but

got this grant and we had to add on extra families…and serving all those extra families in

the short time was our biggest challenge.”

“The strengths were that these were things we wanted to do. So the ability to access

funding allowed us to really jumpstart those very quickly and get them rolling.”

“[But] then you have the challenge of sustainment and sustainability for those things…”

“I used the opportunity to really look at our outreach material to come up with

something that looked just a lot sharper and better and test these things out. So that was

really good.”

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IV. Conclusions

Our second round of focus groups for the Best Start LA Pilot Community Evaluation provides

further evidence that, three years in, Welcome Baby! home visiting has evolved into a very

effective service for families with young children. Home visitors provide highly valued

educational and emotional support to mothers, strengthening their capacity to successfully raise

their infants. Mothers report increased knowledge about their children’s health and

development, success in breastfeeding, and confidence in their childrearing abilities.

Meanwhile, community mobilization efforts are progressing but continue to be hampered by

leadership turnover, hurried implementation of grant-funded projects, and simmering tensions

among some community agencies. Specific, important “takeaways” from our focus groups with

consumers, home visitors, and community stakeholders include the following:

Mothers receiving Welcome Baby! home visiting, as they did 15 months earlier,

expressed great satisfaction with and appreciation of the service. Nearly half of mothers

reported learning about Welcome Baby! prenatally (rather than after delivery at the

hospital), reflecting the success of an important outreach goal for MCH Access to begin

assisting mothers earlier in the process. Parents were hungry for and looked forward to

the promised assistance and described receiving a wide range of supports from the home

visitors, including help with breastfeeding, postpartum “blues,” child sleeping positions

and strategies, diet and nutrition, child development milestones to look for, and home

safety. Numerous focus group participants praised the family-centered approach of their

parent coaches, noting how support and assistance was often extended beyond mother

and child to other family members, husbands, and siblings. The only shortcoming

described by parents was Welcome Baby’s lack of a visit during the five month span

from the infants 4th

to 9th

month—a period of great change when additional help and

advice would have been welcomed. Parents generally felt that their communities did not

offer abundant support to families with young children, and cited a lack of safe parks in

which to play, a shortage of child care resources, and concerns about crime and violence.

Unfortunately, Welcome Baby! participants are still largely unaware of the broader

BSLA initiative in their community, and only somewhat more familiar with the First 5

LA organization and its goals. Less than one in 10 participants said they had either

heard of or participated in any of BSLA’s parent engagement events. (At least some of

this low recognition could likely be due to the fact that Welcome Baby! serves a

catchment area broader than the Metro LA community boundaries and focus group

participants could have been recruited from neighborhoods outside Metro LA.)

Welcome Baby! home visitors described their various efforts to modify and fine-tune the

Welcome Baby! model to improve its capacity to serve and retain mothers of newborns.

One critical shift noted was the hiring of dedicated Outreach Specialists who focus solely

35

on recruitment of expectant mothers, thereby freeing up Parent Coaches to concentrate

on home visiting with enrollees. Outreach to local prenatal clinics and at community

events is augmented by highly productive coordination with California Hospital Medical

Center’s (CHMC’s) Outreach Department staff, which gives Welcome Baby! Outreach

Specialists access to all of the hospital physicians and clients. Another key change to the

model was the swapping of the two-week postpartum phone call with the two-month

postpartum home visit; nurses and parent coaches universally cited the benefits of

making earlier face-to-face contact with new mothers, saying that it helped cement the

presence of Welcome Baby!, improve continuity as nurses hand clients off to parent

coaches, build stronger, earlier rapport between coaches and new mothers, solidify the

establishment of breastfeeding, and increase the odds that mothers will be retained in the

program through to completion. Three years in, it appears that Welcome Baby! is

operating at full capacity. Still, home visitors wished the program had the ability to add

a 6 month and a 12-month visit to the protocol, and also hoped to add mental health

capacity to the array of services it provides.

Community stakeholders, including both members of the Metro LA Community

Guidance Body and representatives of a sample of Collaborative Partner Grantees,

expressed both excitement and gratitude for the benefits that BSLA is slowly bringing to

their community, as well as frustration with the process that often seems disorganized

and inefficient. CGB members described very positive developments regarding parent

involvement, task force formation, and Collaborative Partner Grant projects, but also

unfortunate dynamics surrounding continued disruptive leadership changes at PLN, and

increasingly bureaucratic oversight by F5LA that some felt was stifling creativity and

progress. Collaborative partner grantees, meanwhile, expressed pride and excitement

regarding the projects they had developed, but also described the challenges surrounding

implementation, focusing criticism primarily on the three-month period that was

provided for project completion, a timespan that was described as too short for true,

sustainable community change. Still, collaborative partner projects were embraced by

the community and well used. When asked about their broader familiarity with BSLA,

participants (as employees of community-based agencies) were generally aware of

BSLA, and some had positive views. But several also still held strong, hurt feelings over

the controversy that surrounded the initial launch of the place-based investment, and

believed it had had lasting detrimental effects on the project’s potential. Still, despite the

ups and downs, community members held fundamentally positive feelings for the work

they were doing and the projects that had been enabled.

Focus groups can provide rich qualitative insights into how a program—like Best Start

LA—is implemented and affecting its target populations and communities. Inherent to this

36

method, however, the small numbers of people with whom we spoke limits the extent to which

we can generalize our findings and reach definitive conclusions.

It is hoped that the comments heard from families, providers, and community members

about their early experiences with BSLA—via these focus groups—can provide important

lessons for F5LA and members of the other 13 communities where Best Start LA is being

implemented.

37

References

Benatar, Sarah, Ian Hill and Fiona Adams. 2012. Implementing Best Start LA: Continued

Commitment in the Midst of Persistent Challenges. Washington, DC: The Urban Institute.

August 2012.

First 5 LA. (2010). “Strengthening Families and Communities in LA County.” First 5 LA

Strategic Plan FY 2009-2015. Los Angeles: First 5 LA.

http://www.first5la.org/files/FINAL%20APPROVED%20STRATEGIC%20PLAN.pdf

Hill, Ian, and Fiona Adams. 2011. A Good Start for Best Start in Metro LA: Focus Group

Insights from Parents, Home Visitors, and Community Stakeholders. Washington, DC: The

Urban Institute. July 2011. http://www.urban.org/publications/412423.html

Hill, Ian, and Sarah Benatar. 2011. Implementing Best Start LA: Momentum Grows in Metro LA.

Washington, DC: The Urban Institute. November 2011.

http://www.urban.org/publications/412431.html

Hill, Ian, Sarah Benatar, Fiona Adams, and Heather Sandstrom. 2011. Implementing Best Start

LA in Metro LA: Slow but Steady Progress for this Place-Based Community Initiative.

Washington, DC: The Urban Institute. May 2011.

http://www.urban.org/publications/412407.html

Maternal and Child Health Access. Welcome Baby! Program web page.

http://www.mchaccess.org/welcome_baby.htm (accessed June 1, 2011).

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Appendix 1: Focus Group Moderator’s Guides

39

FOCUS GROUPS: CORE MODERATOR’S GUIDE: WELCOME BABY! MOTHERS

Introduction and Overview of Purpose (5 minutes)

Hello and welcome to our focus group. I’d like to begin by thanking each of you for taking time

out of your day to be here. We appreciate it. I also want to say that the reason you’re here is

quite important, and that I think your time here will be time well spent.

My name is ________, and I’m here with _________. We both work for an organization called

the Urban Institute and have been hired to conduct this focus group to talk with you about your

experiences with home visiting services you have received through the Welcome Baby! program

and the Best Start LA (BSLA) initiative.

Each of you has been invited here because you have received Welcome Baby! home visiting

services. Over the next hour or so, we want to talk with you about your experiences with this

program.

We are having discussions like this with several groups of parents involved with this program so

that we can help the people who created the program learn if its working, and how they can work

to best serve you and your family.

Ground Rules (5 – 10 minutes)

Before we go any further, let me go over a few “ground rules” for today’s discussion.

1. Before we go any further, I want to ask whether any of you have ever been in a “focus

group” before? Just so you know, a “focus group” is an informal small group discussion,

moderated by a facilitator (me) who will guide the discussion through a series of

questions, focused on a particular issue (in this case—Welcome Baby!). I’d like us to just

imagine that we’re sitting around a kitchen table, relaxed and casually chatting with some

new friends. Sound good?

2. First, there are no “right” or “wrong” answers here today. Please feel free to share your

views, even if they are different from what others have said. Please also know that we

don’t work for Welcome Baby!, MCH Access, or First 5 LA so please tell us your

thoughts and opinions, whether they are positive or negative.

3. Second, your participation here is entirely voluntary. You are free to leave at any time.

Also, your confidentiality will be completely protected. When we summarize the

findings of the group, all responses will be “anonymous,” meaning nobody’s name will

appear, and nothing you say will be attributed to you so please be as open as possible in

sharing your thoughts with us.

4. I would really like to encourage everyone to participate. Each of you does not have to

answer each and every question, though, nor do you need to raise your hand to speak. If,

40

however, some of you are shy or don’t get a chance to speak, I may call on you to give

you a turn, because I’d like to know what everyone here thinks.

5. It is important that only one person speak at a time. We want to be respectful of

everyone and give everyone their chance to speak. Also, you may have noticed that we

are recording today’s discussion, so taking turns is important here too—if two people talk

at once, we won’t be able to understand the tape.

6. Now, about the recording. We’re recording the session because we don’t want to miss

anything. Even though we’ll be taking notes as fast as we can, I’m certain we won’t be

able to write everything down! So, the taping is simply a back-up, a tool to ensure that

we get all of your comments. Don’t worry, no one will be listening to these tapes besides

the research team; your confidentiality will be protected.

7. Now, I have a lot that I want to talk about with you today. So I may be forced, from time

to time, to interrupt the discussion and move us along to another topic. But, don’t let me

cut you off! If there’s something important you want to say, let me know before we

change the subject.

8. Just a word about cell phones and restrooms. Please either turn off your cell phone or put

it in “vibrate/silent” mode. If you need to use the restroom, please do so at any time; you

do not need to ask permission. The restrooms are located _________.

9. We will be on a first name basis today, and we’ve placed name cards on the table in front

of you to help us remember each other’s names.

10. Any questions? Okay, let’s begin.

Background Questions (10 – 15 minutes)

Let’s start by going around the table and introducing ourselves. I’d like each of you to tell us

your first name. Then, to break the ice, why don’t you share with all of us a little about yourself.

Why don’t you tell me how long you and your family have lived in Los Angeles?

What neighborhood do you live in?

How many children do you have, and what are their ages?

41

Implementation Questions (30 – 45 minutes)

I’d like to begin by asking you some questions about the home visiting services you’re receiving

through Welcome Baby! and MCH Access.

1. First of all, do you refer to the home visiting services that you receive through MCH

Access as Welcome Baby!, or do you call it something else?

2. How did you first hear about the Welcome Baby! program?

3. When did you sign up for the Welcome Baby! program?

Prenatally? In the hospital at birth? Later?

Where did you sign up? At a clinic? At a hospital?

Who signed you up?

4. Why did you decide to participate in the Welcome Baby! program? What did you expect

to gain (if anything) from the home visiting service?

5. Before the home visiting started from Welcome Baby!, had you ever received any type of

home visiting services previously?

If so, from where? What was the name of the program? What type of services did

they provide?

6. Before you began home visiting with Welcome Baby!, did you have any concerns about

it? Were you comfortable with someone visiting you in your home and talking with you

about how you were going to be raising your child?

42

Okay, let’s now talk about your experiences so far with home visiting services with

Welcome Baby! so far.

7. How long have each of you been receiving home visiting from Welcome Baby!? How

many visits, roughly, have you had?

8. Did a nurse visit you in your home shortly after you gave birth? Tell me about that visit-

what are some of the things that you talked about?

9. Tell me about a typical home visit with your parent coach.

What usually happens?

What are some of the things that you talk about? (Probe: referrals to services in

the community (e.g., health care, WIC, etc.), mother’s health, baby’s health,

breast feeding, child rearing, child development, etc.) \

10. Do you usually meet alone with your parent coach and your child or are you joined by

other family members?

11. Tell me about your relationship with your parent coach.

Do you see the same person for each visit? What are some of the things that you

talk about?

Do you get along well with your parent coach?

Are you comfortable with her?

12. Do you think that the visits happened at the right time for you? Is there too much or too

little time between visits?

13. Do you feel that home visiting has been helpful to you?

What has been most helpful part of home visiting for you?

The nurse visit? The parent coaching? Breastfeeding support? Referrals? Learning

about child development, home safety, etc.?

14. What do you believe has been least helpful part? Do you/did you have any needs that are

not being met by home visitors?

43

Let’s now shift gears and talk about the community in which you live and what it’s like to

be a parent in your community.

I’d like to begin by asking you some questions about being a parent.

15. What are some of the best things you feel as a parent of a young child?

16. What are some of the biggest challenges you face as a parent of a young child in your

community?

17. Generally, what are your views on the level of support for children and families in your

neighborhood?

18. What services do you currently use in the community?

How often?

Did you find out about any of those services from your parent coach?

19. Does the community in which you live have all of the resources and services you need, as

a parent? For example, health services, food support (WIC), education and child

development support, parks, libraries?

20. What are the key services you need that are missing from your community?

21. What services would you like to see developed in your community?

22. Have you heard of “Best Start LA?”

How or where did you first hear about it?

What is your understanding of what Best Start LA is and what it is trying to

accomplish?

23. Have you heard of Para Los Niños? What is your understanding of what they do?

24. Have you heard of Hope Street? (If so, what do they do?)

25. Have you heard of The Children’s Bureau? (If so, what do they do?)

26. Have you seen any recent changes in your community – good or bad - with regard to

services for families with young children? If so, please describe.

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Lessons Learned (15 minutes – 20 minutes)

We’re almost done. Thank you so much for the information you’ve provided so far! Now, to

conclude, we would like to ask you about any advice you might have for the folks who run

Welcome Baby! and Best Start LA.

27. Are you happy with the services you have received through Welcome Baby!? Has the

program met your needs in terms of supporting you and your family?

28. Are there ways in which the program has not helped you? If not, how so?

29. What other experiences (good or bad) can you share with us about getting services

through Welcome Baby!?

30. If you had to identify one benefits or positive thing has come out of your participation in

this program, what would it be?

31. [Only ask this if they group was familiar with BSLA]: Overall, how do you feel now

about the Best Start LA initiative? Was it a good idea? How could First 5 LA have done a

better job with this initiative?

32. Is there anything that you think should be done to improve Welcome Baby! or BSLA?

Thank you

Those are all the questions that I have for you today. Is there anything else that anyone would

like to add that you think might be helpful for us?

Thank you very much for your time and your thoughts

45

EVALUACIÓN DE LA INICIATIVA “BEST START LA” GUÍA DE MODERACIÓN PARA EL GRUPO DE

DISCUSIÓN MADRES QUE SE HAN GRADUADO DE WELCOME BABY!

Presentación y Propósitos Generales (5 minutos)

Buenos días/Buenas tardes y bienvenidas a nuestro grupo de discusión. Me gustaría empezar

dándole las gracias a cada una de ustedes por tomarse tiempo de su día para estar aquí. Se lo

agradecemos. También deseo decirles que la razón por la que están aquí es muy importante, y

creo que su tiempo aquí será muy bien invertido.

Mi nombre es ________, y estoy aquí con _________. Ambas trabajamos para las

organizaciones llamadas el Instituto Urbano y la Universidad de California en Los Angeles.

Hemos sido contratadas para dirigir este grupo de discusión y hablar con ustedes acerca de sus

experiencias obteniendo servicios de visitas al hogar por el programa Welcome Baby!

Cada una de ustedes ha sido invitada porque ha recibido servicios por este programa. En la

siguiente hora aproximadamente, queremos hablar con ustedes sobre sus experiencias con este

programa.

Nosotros estamos realizando discusiones como ésta con otras madres que han recibido estos

servicios, para poder ayudar a que los políticos y proveedores mejoren sus programas para niños

y familias como las suyas.

Reglas Básicas (5 - 10 minutos)

Antes de seguir adelante permítanme señalar algunas reglas básicas para nuestra plática de hoy.

1. Antes de comenzar, les quiero preguntar: Hay alguien aquí que alguna vez ha

participado en un grupo de discusión, o “un grupo focal”? Un grupo de discusión es

una discusión pequeña con una moderadora, como yo, que guía la discusión con una

lista de preguntas enfocado en un tema. En este caso, el tema es el programa de

Welcome Baby! Me gustaría que todas imaginaran estar sentadas alrededor de una

mesa de cocina, conversando con amigas nuevas. ¿Les suena bien?

2. Primero, no hay respuestas buenas o malas en este grupo de discusión. Siéntase en

confianza de compartir sus puntos de vista, aun cuando estos sean diferentes de los

demás. Quiero que sepan que no trabajamos para Welcome Baby!, MCH Access, ni

para First 5 LA, así que por favor díganos sus opiniones, así sean positivas o

negativas.

3. Segundo, su participación en este grupo de discusión es voluntaria. Se pueden retirar

en cualquier momento. También, su confidencialidad será completamente protegida.

46

Cuando hacemos un resumen de la discusión del grupo, todas las respuestas serán

anónimas y no se le identificará a usted.

4. Quiero animarlas para que cada uno de ustedes participe en esta plática. No todos

tienen que contestar cada una de las preguntas, tampoco necesitan levantar la mano

para hablar. Sin embargo, si alguna de ustedes no participa y es importante para mi

saber su opinión, le pediremos por favor que me la de.

5. Es importante que hablen una a la vez. Mostremos respeto hacia los demás y demos a

cada una la oportunidad de hablar. También, usted habrá notado que estamos

grabando la plática de hoy, de manera pues, que es importante que hablemos por

turnos—si dos personas hablan al mismo tiempo, no podremos entender después lo

que se grabó.

6. Ahora, hablemos de la grabación. Estamos grabando la reunión porque no deseamos

pasar por alto nada de lo que usted nos diga. Aun cuando estaremos tomando notas

tan rápido como podamos, de seguro que no podremos escribir todo! De manera que

la grabación es simplemente un apoyo, una herramienta para asegurarnos que

tendremos todos sus comentarios. Por favor no se preocupe, nadie además del equipo

investigador estará escuchando estas grabaciones; su confidencialidad será protegida.

7. Ahora, tengo mucho que hablar con ustedes en este día. Así que habrá momentos en

que me veré forzada a interrumpir la plática y continuar con el siguiente tema. Pero

no me permitan interrumpirles si hay algo importante que ustedes desean decir, solo

avísenme antes de pasar a otro tema.

8. Una nota sobre los celulares. Por favor, apaguen sus celulares o pónganlos en

vibración o silencio. Si necesite usar el baño, por favor vaya; no nos necesitan pedir

permiso. Los baños están _______.

9. Nos dirigimos a usted solo por su primer nombre, y hemos colocado tarjetas con su

nombre sobre la mesa para ayudarnos a recordarlo.

10. ¿Alguna pregunta? Muy bien, empecemos.

47

Preguntas de sobre antecedentes. (10 - 15 minutos)

Empecemos alrededor de la mesa y presentémonos. Me gustaría que cada uno de ustedes

nos diga su primer nombre. Y para conocernos mejor, cuéntenos

¿Cuánto tiempo llevan usted y su familia viviendo en Los Ángeles?

¿En qué barrio vive?

¿Cuántos niños tiene, y cuantos años tienen?

Preguntas de Implementación del Programa (20 minutos)

Ahora, me gustaría preguntarles sobre los servicios de visitas al hogar que ricibieron

por el programa Welcome Baby! y MCH Access.

1. Primero, ¿Cómo se le llama el programa de visitas al hogar que recibes por MCH

Access? ¿Se le llama Welcome Baby!, u usa otro nombre?

2. ¿Dónde escuchó sobre el programa de Welcome Baby! por primera vez?

3. ¿Cuándo se inscribió en el programa?

¿Antes del parto? En el hospital después del parto? ¿Más tarde?

¿Dónde se inscribió? ¿En una clínica? ¿En el hospital?

¿Quién le ayudó?

4. ¿Por qué decidió participar en el programa de Welcome Baby!? ¿Cuáles fueron sus

expectativas y sus metas para los servicios de visitas al hogar por el programa de

Welcome Baby!?

5. ¿Antes de recibir los servicios de visitas al hogar por Welcome Baby!, recibió otro

tipo de visitas al hogar por algún programa?

Si las recibió, ¿de dónde? ¿Cómo se llamaba el programa? ¿Qué tipo de

servicios les proveyó ese programa?

6. Antes de la primera visita al hogar por Welcome Baby! ¿Se sintió cómoda con la idea

de una persona visitándole en su hogar y discutiendo con usted la crianza de su(s)

hijo(s)? ¿Hubo algo que le preocupó?

48

Bueno, ahora hablemos más específicamente sobre sus experiencias con las visitas al

hogar.

7. ¿Por cuánto tiempo ha recibido servicios de visitas al hogar por el programa Welcome

Baby!? ¿Aproximadamente, cuántas visitas ha tenido?

¿Piensa que las visitas ocurrieron cuando las necesitaban?

¿Hay demasiado o insuficiente tiempo entre las visitas?

8. Describa una visita al hogar típica.

¿Qué pasa?

¿De qué hablan durante la visita? [Referencias para servicios en la comunidad

(como servicios de salud, WIC, etc.), salud de la madre, salud de los niños,

crianza de hijos, desarrollo de niños)]

9. Típicamente, ¿se reunieron sola con la visitadora y su bebe en privado, o había otra

gente [esposo, otros hijos, familiares, amigos] en el cuarto también?

10. ¿Cómo era su relación con su visitadora al hogar?

¿La misma visitadora venía a su casa cada vez, o había varias personas?

¿Cómo se llevaba[n] con ella[s]?

¿Se relacionaba[n] bien con usted?

11. ¿Alguna vez pensó en abandonar el programa?

¿Qué cambió su opinión?

12. ¿Cómo se sintió cuando el programa se terminó y todavia no recibió las visitas al

hogar de Welcome Baby!?

¿Se sintió triste o apenado?

¿Se sintió que todavia necesitaba el apoyo que le proveyó el programa?

O ¿se sintió bien; lista para estar sola?

49

13. ¿Para las que piensan que las visitas terminaron antes de tiempo, por cuanto tiempo

piensas que hubiera beneficiado de ellas?

14. ¿Reflejando en la experiencia, cuál era el aspecto más útil del programa?

¿La visita de la enfermera? ¿Ayuda de su visitadora del hogar? ¿Apoyo con

amamantamiento? ¿Referencias? ¿Información sobre el desarrollo de niños,

seguridad del hogar, etc?

15. ¿Cuál era el aspecto más inútil del programa? ¿Tenía algunas necesidades no

satisfechas por las visitadoras al hogar?

¿Hay cosas que deseaba que hiciera su visitadora del hogar que no hizo? ¿O

cosas que hiciera más?

16. ¿Desde graduarse del programa, hay cosas que se extraña sobre él?

17. ¿Hay habilidades que aprendiste por Welcome Baby! que ha usado desde el programa

se terminó? Descríbenlas.

18. ¿Hay habilidades que desee obtender del programa, pero no las obtuvo?

19. ¿Cómo van las cosas desde graduarse del programa, con respeto a criar su(s) hijo(s),

obtener servicios en la comunidad, etc.?

Ahora, hablemos de sus experiencias como madres en esta comunidad, los servicios que existen

allí, y si usted ha visto algunos cambios en su comunidad debido a la iniciativa “Best Start LA.”

20. ¿En su opinión, cuáles son algunas de las recompensas más grandes que se siente

usted por ser madre de un niño/a?

21. ¿Cuáles son los desafíos más grandes que siente usted por ser madre de un niño/a en

esta comunidad?

22. En general, ¿qué piensa usted sobre el nivel de apoyo para niños y familias en su

comunidad?

23. ¿Actualmente usted usa algunos servicios en su comunidad?

¿Cuáles?

¿Con qué frecuencia?

¿Se enteró de estos servicios por su visitadora al hogar?

50

24. ¿Su comunidad tiene todos los recursos y servicios que necesita una madre? Por

ejemplo, ¿tiene servicios de salud, asistencia nutricional, educación, o servicios para

el desarrollo de niños, parques, bibliotecas?

25. ¿Cuáles servicios claves faltan en su comunidad?

26. ¿Cuáles servicios le gustarían ver desarrollados en su comunidad?

27. ¿Ha escuchado de la iniciativa “Best Start LA”?

¿Cómo, y dónde lo escuchó por primera vez?

¿Cuál es su entendimiento del propósito de “Best Start LA” y lo que trata de

lograr?

28. ¿Ha escuchado de una organización llamada Para Los Niños? (Si sí: ¿Qué hace?)

29. ¿Ha escuchado de una organización llamada el Centro Familiar de Hope Street? (Si

sí: ¿Qué hace?)

30. ¿Ha escuchado de una organización llamada Children’s Bureau? ¿Magnolia Place?

(Si sí: ¿Qué hace?)

31. ¿Ha visto algunos mejoramientos recientes en su comunidad, con respecto a los

servicios para niños y sus familias?

Lecciones Aprendidas (15 minutos)

Casi hemos terminado. Muchas gracias por todo lo que nos han dicho hasta ahora. Para concluir,

nos gustaría oír sus recomendaciones para los que dirigen el programa de Welcome Baby! y el

iniciativo “Best Start LA.”

De todo lo que me han dicho, suena que el programa Welcome Baby!...

[HAGA UN RESUMEN DE SUS COMENTARIOS EN PALABRAS GENERALES, Y

CONTINÚE CON LAS PREGUNTAS ABAJO SI EXISTE LAGUNAS]

32. ¿Se encuentra usted satisfecha con los servicios que ha recibido por el programa

Welcome Baby!? ¿Ha satisfecho las necesidades de usted y su familia?

33. ¿ En que no le ayudó el programa a satisfacer sus necesidades?

34. ¿Tiene otras experiencias – buenas o malas – que puede compartir sobre el programa

de Welcome Baby!?

51

35. Si tenía que identificar un beneficio específico que le ha resultado a usted por su

participación en este programa, ¿qué sería?

36. [En general, ¿cómo se siente ahora sobre la iniciativa de “Best Start LA”? ¿Fue una

buena idea? ¿Qué pudiera hacer mejor la organización First 5 LA con esta iniciativa?]

37. ¿Hay algo que debemos hacer para mejorar el programa Welcome Baby! o “Best Start

LA”?

Gracias

Ya hemos terminado todas las preguntas que teníamos para ustedes. ¿Hay algo que requieran

decir o preguntar antes de terminar?

Gracias de nuevo por su valiosa participación en este grupo.

52

FOCUS GROUPS: CORE MODERATOR’S GUIDE: WELCOME BABY! GRADUATES

Introduction and Overview of Purpose (5 minutes)

Hello and welcome to our focus group. I’d like to begin by thanking each of you for taking time

out of your day to be here. We appreciate it. I also want to say that the reason you’re here is

quite important, and that I think your time here will be time well spent.

My name is ________, and I’m here with _________. We both work for an organization called

the Urban Institute and have been hired to conduct this focus group to talk with you about your

experiences with home visiting services you have received through the Welcome Baby! program

and the Best Start LA (BSLA) initiative.

Each of you has been invited here because you have received Welcome Baby! home visiting

services. Over the next hour or so, we want to talk with you about your experiences with this

program.

We are having discussions like this with several groups of parents involved with this program so

that we can help the people who created the program learn if its working, and how they can work

to best serve you and your family.

Ground Rules (5 – 10 minutes)

Before we go any further, let me go over a few “ground rules” for today’s discussion.

1. Before we go any further, I want to ask whether any of you have ever been in a “focus

group” before? Just so you know, a “focus group” is an informal small group discussion,

moderated by a facilitator (me) who will guide the discussion through a series of

questions, focused on a particular issue (in this case—Welcome Baby!). I’d like us to just

imagine that we’re sitting around a kitchen table, relaxed and casually chatting with some

new friends. Sound good?

2. First, there are no “right” or “wrong” answers here today. Please feel free to share your

views, even if they are different from what others have said. Please also know that we

don’t work for Welcome Baby!, MCH Access, or First 5 LA so please tell us your

thoughts and opinions, whether they are positive or negative.

3. Second, your participation here is entirely voluntary. You are free to leave at any time.

Also, your confidentiality will be completely protected. When we summarize the

findings of the group, all responses will be “anonymous,” meaning nobody’s name will

appear, and nothing you say will be attributed to you so please be as open as possible in

sharing your thoughts with us.

4. I would really like to encourage everyone to participate. Each of you does not have to

answer each and every question, though, nor do you need to raise your hand to speak. If,

53

however, some of you are shy or don’t get a chance to speak, I may call on you to give

you a turn, because I’d like to know what everyone here thinks.

5. It is important that only one person speak at a time. We want to be respectful of

everyone and give everyone their chance to speak. Also, you may have noticed that we

are recording today’s discussion, so taking turns is important here too—if two people talk

at once, we won’t be able to understand the tape.

6. Now, about the recording. We’re recording the session because we don’t want to miss

anything. Even though we’ll be taking notes as fast as we can, I’m certain we won’t be

able to write everything down! So, the taping is simply a back-up, a tool to ensure that

we get all of your comments. Don’t worry, no one will be listening to these tapes besides

the research team; your confidentiality will be protected.

7. Now, I have a lot that I want to talk about with you today. So I may be forced, from time

to time, to interrupt the discussion and move us along to another topic. But, don’t let me

cut you off! If there’s something important you want to say, let me know before we

change the subject.

8. Just a word about cell phones and restrooms. Please either turn off your cell phone or put

it in “vibrate/silent” mode. If you need to use the restroom, please do so at any time; you

do not need to ask permission. The restrooms are located _________.

9. We will be on a first name basis today, and we’ve placed name cards on the table in front

of you to help us remember each other’s names.

10. Any questions? Okay, let’s begin.

Background Questions (10 – 15 minutes)

Let’s start by going around the table and introducing ourselves. I’d like each of you to tell us

your first name. Then, to break the ice, why don’t you share with all of us a little about yourself.

Why don’t you tell me how long you and your family have lived in Los Angeles?

What neighborhood do you live in?

How many children do you have, and what are their ages?

54

Implementation Questions (30 – 45 minutes)

I’d like to begin by asking you some questions about the home visiting services you received

through Welcome Baby! and MCH Access.

1. First of all, do you refer to the home visiting services that you receive through MCH

Access as Welcome Baby!, or do you call it something else?

2. How did you first hear about the Welcome Baby! program?

3. When did you sign up for the Welcome Baby! program?

Prenatally? In the hospital at birth? Later?

Where did you sign up? At a clinic? At a hospital?

Who signed you up?

4. Why did you decide to participate in the Welcome Baby! program? What did you expect

to gain (if anything) from the home visiting service?

5. Before Welcome Baby!, had you ever received any type of home visiting services

previously?

If so, from where? What was the name of the program? What type of services did

they provide?

6. Before Welcome Baby!, did you have any concerns about having someone visit you in

your home and talking with you about how you were going to be raising your child?

Okay, let’s now talk about your experiences with the Welcome Baby! home visiting

program.

55

7. How long did you receive home visiting from Welcome Baby!? How many visits,

roughly, did you have?

a. Did you think that the visits happened at the right time for you?

b. Was there too much or too little time between visits?

8. Tell me about a typical home visit with your parent coach.

What usually happened?

What are some of the things that you would talk about? (Probe: referrals to

services in the community (e.g., health care, WIC, etc.), mother’s health, baby’s

health, breast feeding, child rearing, child development, etc.)

9. Did you usually meet alone with your parent coach and your child or were you joined by

other family members?

10. Tell me about your relationship with your parent coach.

Did you see the same person for each visit?

Did you get along well with your parent coach?

11. Did you ever consider dropping out of the program? If so, why?

What changed your mind and helped you decide to stay in the program?

12. How did you feel when the program ended and you were no longer to receive Welcome

Baby visits?

Were you sad or upset?

Did you feel like you still needed the support that Welcome Baby provided?

Or did you feel okay, ready to be on your own?

13. For those of you who feel like Welcome Baby ended “too soon”: How much longer do

you think you could have benefited from home visiting help?

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14. Thinking back on the experience, what was the most helpful part of home visiting for

you?

The nurse visit? The parent coaching? Breastfeeding support? Referrals? Learning

about child development, home safety, etc.?

15. What do you believe was been least helpful part? Did you have any needs that were not

met by the home visitors?

a. Are there things you wished they’d done differently – or done more of?

16. Since you “graduated” from the program, are there things you have missed about it?

Tell me about that.

17. Were there tools or skills that you learned from your parent coach that you’ve been

using since the program ended? Tell me about that.

18. Are there tools or skills you wish you would have gotten from the Welcome Baby!

program, but did not?

19. How has life been going for you since you graduated, as far as raising your child, getting

services in the community, etc?

Let’s now shift gears and talk about the community in which you live and what it’s like to

be a parent in your community.

I’d like to begin by asking you some questions about being a parent.

20. What are some of the best things you feel as a parent of a young child?

21. What are some of the biggest challenges you face as a parent of a young child in your

community?

22. Generally, what are your views on the level of support for children and families in your

neighborhood?

23. What services do you currently use in the community?

57

How often?

Did you find out about any of those services from your parent coach?

24. Does the community in which you live have all of the resources and services you need, as

a parent? For example, health services, food support (WIC), education and child

development support, parks, libraries?

25. What are the key services you need that are missing from your community?

26. What services would you like to see developed in your community?

27. Have you heard of “Best Start LA?”

How or where did you first hear about it?

What is your understanding of what Best Start LA is and what it is trying to

accomplish?

28. Have you heard of Para Los Niños? What is your understanding of what they do?

29. Have you heard of Hope Street? (If so, what do they do?)

30. Have you heard of The Children’s Bureau? Magnolia Place? (If so, what do they do?)

31. Have you seen any recent changes in your community – good or bad - with regard to

services for families with young children? If so, please describe.

58

Lessons Learned (15 minutes – 20 minutes)

We’re almost done. Thank you so much for the information you’ve provided so far! Now, to

conclude, we would like to ask you about any advice you might have for the folks who run

Welcome Baby! and Best Start LA.

32. Are you happy with the services you received through Welcome Baby!? Did the program

meet your needs in terms of supporting you and your family?

33. Are there ways in which the program did not help you? If not, how so?

34. What other experiences (good or bad) can you share with us about your involvement with

Welcome Baby!?

35. If you had to identify one benefits or positive thing has come out of your participation in

this program, what would it be?

36. [Only ask this if they group was familiar with BSLA]: Overall, how do you feel now

about the Best Start LA initiative? Was it a good idea? How could First 5 LA have done a

better job with this initiative?

37. Is there anything that you think should be done to improve Welcome Baby! or BSLA?

Thank you

Those are all the questions that I have for you today. Is there anything else that anyone would

like to add that you think might be helpful for us?

Thank you very much for your time and your thoughts

59

FOCUS GROUPS: CORE MODERATOR’S GUIDE: WELCOME BABY! HOME VISITORS

Introduction and Overview of Purpose (5 minutes)

Hello and welcome to our focus group. I’d like to begin by thanking each of you for taking time

out of your day to be here. We appreciate it. I also want to say that the reason you’re here is

quite important, and that I think your time here will be time well spent.

My name is ________, and I’m here with _________. We both work for an organization called

the Urban Institute and have been hired to conduct this focus group to talk with you about your

experiences with the Best Start LA initiative.

Each of you has been invited here because you work for MCH Access and provide home visiting

services through the Welcome Baby! program. Over the next hour or so, we want to talk with

you about your experiences with Welcome, Baby! and the Best Start LA Initiative more

generally.

We are having discussions like this with several groups of Best Start LA stakeholders here in Los

Angeles so that we can help policymakers and providers improve their efforts to serve children

and families in Metro LA.

Ground Rules (5 – 10 minutes)

Before we go any further, let me go over a few “ground rules” for today’s discussion.

1. Before we go any further, I want to ask whether any of you have ever been in a “focus

group” before? Just so you know, a “focus group” is an informal small group discussion,

moderated by a facilitator (me) who will guide the discussion through a series of

questions, focused on a particular issue (in this case—Welcome Baby!). I’d like us to just

imagine that we’re sitting around a kitchen table, relaxed and casually chatting with some

new friends. Sound good?

2. First, there are no “right” or “wrong” answers here today. Please feel free to share your

views, even if they are different from what others have said. Please also know that we

don’t work for First 5 or Best Start LA. Also, your remarks here today will in no way

affect your relationship with your employer, MCH Access. So, please tell us your

thoughts and opinions, whether they are positive or negative.

3. Second, your participation here is entirely voluntary. You are free to leave at any time.

Also, your confidentiality will be completely protected. When we summarize the

findings of the group, all responses will be “anonymous” and none will be attributed to

you.

4. I would really like to encourage everyone to participate. Each of you does not have to

answer each and every question, though, nor do you need to raise your hand to speak. If,

however, some of you are shy or I really want to know what you think, I may call on you.

60

5. It is important that only one person speak at a time. Let’s show each other the respect we

deserve and give everyone their chance to speak. Also, you may have noticed that we are

recording today’s discussion, so taking turns is important here too—if two people talk at

once, we won’t be able to understand the tape.

6. Now, about the recording. We’re recording the session because we don’t want to miss

anything. Even though we’ll be taking notes as fast as we can, I’m certain we won’t be

able to write everything down! So, the taping is simply a back-up, a tool to ensure that

we get all of your comments. Don’t worry, no one will be listening to these tapes besides

the research team; your confidentiality will be protected.

7. Now, I have a lot that I want to talk about today. So I may be forced, from time to time,

to interrupt the discussion and move us along to another topic. But, don’t let me cut you

off! If there’s something important you want to say, let me know before we change

subjects.

8. Just a word about cell phones and bathrooms. Please either turn off your cell phone or

put it in “vibrate/silent” mode. If you need to use the bathroom, please do so at any time;

you do not need to ask permission. The bathrooms are located _________.

9. We will be on a first name basis today, and we’ve placed name cards on the table in front

of you to help us remember each other’s names.

10. Any questions? Okay, let’s begin.

Background Questions (10 – 15 minutes)

Let’s start by going around the table and introducing ourselves. I’d like each of you to tell us

your first name. Then, to break the ice, why don’t you share with all of us a little about yourself.

Implementation Questions (30 – 45 minutes)

For Home Visitors:

Let’s begin with a few background questions:

Please tell me a little bit about your background and training.

1. How long have you worked at MCH Access with the Welcome Baby! program? Why

did you want to work there? How did you hear about MCH Access and the Welcome

Baby! program?

61

2. What role do you specifically play in home visiting? (Are you a nurse? A parent

coach?)

3. What type of training did you receive from MCH Access to prepare you for home

visiting? What was covered during this training? Do you think that this training

prepared you well for conducting home visits for this program? [Probes: Why or why

not? Was anything missing?]

4. What were your expectations for Welcome Baby! before you started? What kinds of

families did you expect to work with, and what types of challenges did you expect

families to be facing?

Let’s now talk about your actual experiences, thus far, with Welcome Baby!.

5. Is it part of your job to recruit clients into Welcome Baby!?

o Where and how do you recruit clients? (At prenatal clinics? In the hospital?

At pediatrician’s offices? Where else?)

o How do potential clients respond to the Welcome Baby! program when you

first “pitch” the program to them?

o How much of your time do you spend recruiting versus doing home visits?

6. How many families do you have in your caseload right now? Does this feel like the

“right” amount of cases? Or is this too few cases? Or are you being stretched too

thin?

7. Tell me about the families you meet with. What are some of the challenges they

typically face? Are these what you expected or different somehow? In what ways?

For those of you who have been here for a bit – has the “typical” family enrolled

in WB! changed since you first started this job?

What do you think explains this change?

8. Tell me about a typical home visit. Do get the sense that families feel comfortable

with you in their homes? What subjects/topics do you discuss during a typical first

visit? A second visit? Etc? What topics are the mothers most eager to discuss with

you? What are they less eager to talk about, or uncomfortable with discussing?

9. Normally, how much time do you spend with each client during a visit?

10. Do you make calls to the families in between in-person visits to check in and see how

are things are going? How often?

How has this changed? (as you’ve gotten more busy, the protocol changed,

still as necessary)?

62

11. How do you coordinate and schedule visits with families? Is it easy or difficult? What

are some of the obstacles you have encountered?

12. How does the transition of clients between nurses and parent coaches work? Is this a

smooth transition? What kind of information do you share about your mutual clients?

13. How many visits do you typically complete w/ each family? Do most families

complete the full course (through the 9 month visit) of home visiting? If not, why do

you think this is?

Has this changed at all over time? If yes, how so?

14. Do you think that you are providing enough visits to families through the Welcome

Baby! program? Do you feel that clients would benefit from having more visits?

15. We understand that you collect data about each family during your home visits. Does

all of this data go into the DCAR system? How well does that system support your

work? What are its strengths? Weaknesses? How could it be improved?

Lessons Learned

16. What are some of the biggest rewards that you experience as a nurse or a parent

coach?

17. What are some of the biggest challenges that you experience as a nurse or a parent

coach?

18. Do you feel like you’re helping these families? In what ways? What benefits do you

see parents and children experiencing in the short term? What about the longer term

effects of the home visiting? What has been most effective aspect of the home visits?

Why?

19. What challenges have you observed with home visiting? Do you feel like there are

ways in which the visits are falling short of their potential? What’s not working as

well as you’d like?

20. Do you have any ideas of ways to improve the Welcome Baby! program?

Thank you

Those are all the questions that I have for you today. Is there anything else that anyone would

like to add that you think might be helpful for us?

Thank you very much for your time and your thoughts.

63

FOCUS GROUPS: CORE MODERATOR’S GUIDE: COMMUNITY GUIDANCE BODY MEMBERS

Introduction and Overview of Purpose (5 minutes)

Hello and welcome to our focus group. I’d like to begin by thanking each of you for taking time

out of your day to be here. We appreciate it. I also want to say that the reason you’re here is

quite important, and that I think your time here will be time well spent.

My name is ________, and I’m here with _________. We both work for an organization called

the Urban Institute and have been hired to conduct this focus group to talk with you about your

experiences with the Best Start LA (BSLA) initiative.

Each of you has been invited here because you are a member of the Community Guidance Body

for the “Metro LA” neighborhood, under the Best Start LA initiative. Over the next hour or so,

we want to talk with you about your experiences with Best Start LA.

We are having discussions like this with several groups of BSLA stakeholders here in Los

Angeles so that we can help policymakers and providers improve their efforts to serve the Pilot

Community (Metro LA).

Ground Rules (5 – 10 minutes)

Before we go any further, let me go over a few “ground rules” for today’s discussion.

1. First, I want to ask whether any of you have ever been in a “focus group” before? Just so

you know, a “focus group” is an informal small group discussion, moderated by a

facilitator (me) who will guide the discussion through a series of questions, focused on a

particular issue (in this case—Best Start LA). I’d like us to just imagine that we’re sitting

around a kitchen table, relaxed and casually chatting with some new friends. Sound

good?

2. There are no “right” or “wrong” answers here today. Please feel free to share your views,

even if they are different from what others have said. Please also know that we don’t

work for First 5 LA, so please tell us your thoughts and opinions, whether they are

positive or negative.

3. In addition, your participation here is entirely voluntary. You are free to leave at any

time. Also, your confidentiality will be completely protected. When we summarize the

findings of the group, all responses will be “anonymous” and none will be attributed to

you.

4. I would really like to encourage everyone to participate. Each of you does not have to

answer each and every question, though, nor do you need to raise your hand to speak. If,

however, some of you are shy or I really want to know what you think, I may call on you.

64

5. It is important that only one person speak at a time. Let’s show each other the respect we

deserve and give everyone their chance to speak. Also, you may have noticed that we are

recording today’s discussion, so taking turns is important here too—if two people talk at

once, we won’t be able to understand the tape.

6. Now, about the recording. We’re recording the session because we don’t want to miss

anything. Even though we’ll be taking notes as fast as we can, I’m certain we won’t be

able to write everything down! So, the taping is simply a back-up, a tool to ensure that

we get all of your comments. Don’t worry, no one will be listening to these tapes besides

the research team; your confidentiality will be protected.

7. Now, I have a lot that I want to talk about today. So I may be forced, from time to time,

to interrupt the discussion and move us along to another topic. But, don’t let me cut you

off! If there’s something important you want to say, let me know before we change

subjects.

8. Just a word about cell phones and bathrooms. Please either turn off your cell phone or

put it in “vibrate/silent” mode. If you need to use the bathroom, please do so at any time;

you do not need to ask permission. The bathrooms are located _________.

9. We will be on a first name basis today, and we’ve placed name cards on the table in front

of you to help us remember each other’s names.

10. Any questions? Okay, let’s begin.

Background Questions (10 – 15 minutes)

Let’s start by going around the table and introducing ourselves. I’d like each of you to tell us

your first name. Then, to break the ice, why don’t you share with all of us a little about yourself.

What is your personal connection to the Metro LA community?

For the parents in the group: Tell us a little about yourselves and your family. How

long have you and your family lived in Metro LA? How many children do you have,

and what are their ages?

For those representing community organizations in the group: What is your

professional background? Could you tell us a little bit about the mission of the

organization that you work for? Is your organization located within the boundaries of

Metro LA?

65

Implementation Questions (30 – 45 minutes)

Once again, you are all here today because you are a part of the Best Start LA Community

Guidance Body for Metro LA. I’d like to start off by talking about how each of you became

involved with the BSLA Initiative.

1. Let’s talk about the “pilot community” where Best Start LA has been launched. How

would you describe the Metro LA community to someone who has never been there

before?

Tell me about its diversity, its families, its businesses, its services, or anything

else that comes to mind.

2. What would you say are Metro LA’s biggest strengths? What about the community’s

biggest weaknesses?

3. How did you first hear about the Best Start LA Initiative?

Did you hear about it through contact w/ Para Los Niños? First 5 LA?

Someone/somewhere else?

4. Why/how did you decide to get involved in the Best Start LA Initiative and the

Community Guidance Body in particular?

Did you attend any of the “Information Sessions” and/or “Parent’s Sessions” over

the last year? What were those like?

How long have you been involved with the CGB?

5. I know that everyone from the CGB couldn’t make it to our focus group tonight and

that you are a subset of the larger group. Given that, what can you tell us about the

composition of the Community Guidance Body (as a whole)?

Do you feel that it contains all the right mix of people? (i.e., parents,

professionals, etc.?)

Is there anyone missing from the table (or under-represented)? Is any group over-

represented?

Who else would you like to see involved?

6. What are your roles and responsibilities as members of the Community Guidance

Body?

Are you involved with a particular task force? Please tell me about that…

66

Do you serve on the Executive Committee?

How often do you meet as a group?

7. What have been the agendas of the various meetings that have occurred over the last

year? What kind of progress have you made?

8. What has the CGB been focused on this past year? How are things evolving?

I’d like to now ask you a few questions about your views on the Best Start LA initiative and its

progress thus far.

9. In your own words, what do you think the Best Start LA Initiative is trying to

accomplish in Metro LA? What are its objectives?

10. In general, how do you feel about Best Start’s progress in Metro LA so far?

11. How has parent engagement in Best Start LA being going? Do parents seem eager to

get involved?

12. What about BSLA’s efforts to mobilize Metro LA and build its unity? How is that

going?

Is the community aware of Best Start LA? Why or why not?

13. We understand that there have been recent leadership changes at Para Los Niños.

How has that affected the work of the Community Guidance Body?

Has it slowed progress?

Has it made things more difficult? Easier? How?

14. Looking ahead, can you share with us a specific example or two of what you’d like to

see developed in the community as a result of Best Start, and why?

15. Have you heard anything about the home visiting services being provided in Metro

LA through the Welcome Baby! program? Do you think the community is aware that

these services are being offered to new mothers? Do you know if they are working

well or not?

16. Are you involved with any of the BSLA Community Partners (Hope Street, Maternal

Child Health Access, etc.)?

17. How about The Children’s Bureau and/or Magnolia Place; have you ever worked

with them on any programs or services in the community? Please describe.

67

Lessons Learned

Let’s wrap up by talking about some of the “lessons” you’ve learned thus far. Community

mobilization, or organization, is a complex undertaking and you folks have been hard at work for

many months. Reflecting on that time:

18. What have been the biggest accomplishments for the Community Guidance Body so

far?

19. What have been the biggest challenges for the Community Guidance Body so far?

20. Where do you hope to be six months from now? One year from now?

21. What challenges do you think lie ahead for Best Start in Metro LA?

22. Thinking back on the last year, is there anything you think that Best Start LA, or

PLN, or the CGB itself should have done differently?

Were there particular areas where things could have been done better?

Do you feel that progress is on-track since we last spoke about a year ago?

What “lessons” would you share with CGBs that are forming in the 14 other Best

Start LA communities that might help them get off to a good start?

Thank you

Those are all the questions that I have for you today. Is there anything else that anyone would

like to add that you think might be helpful for us?

Thank you very much for your time and your thoughts.

68

FOCUS GROUPS: CORE MODERATOR’S GUIDE: COLLABORATIVE PARTNER GRANTEES

Introduction and Overview of Purpose (5 minutes)

Hello and welcome to our focus group. I’d like to begin by thanking each of you for taking time

out of your day to be here. We appreciate it. I also want to say that the reason you’re here is

quite important, and that I think your time here will be time well spent.

My name is ________, and I’m here with _________. We both work for an organization called

the Urban Institute and have been hired to conduct this focus group to talk with you about your

experiences with the Best Start LA (BSLA) initiative.

Each of you has been invited here because you were a recipient of the first round of collaborative

partner grant funding for the Metro LA neighborhood, under the Best Start LA initiative. Over

the next hour or so, we want to talk with you about your experiences with Best Start LA.

We are having discussions like this with several groups of BSLA stakeholders here in Los

Angeles so that we can help policymakers and providers improve their efforts to serve the Pilot

Community (Metro LA).

Ground Rules (5 – 10 minutes)

Before we go any further, let me go over a few “ground rules” for today’s discussion.

1. First, I want to ask whether any of you have ever been in a “focus group” before? Just so

you know, a “focus group” is an informal small group discussion, moderated by a

facilitator (me) who will guide the discussion through a series of questions, focused on a

particular issue (in this case—Best Start LA). I’d like us to just imagine that we’re sitting

around a kitchen table, relaxed and casually chatting with some new friends. Sound good?

2. There are no “right” or “wrong” answers here today. Please feel free to share your views,

even if they are different from what others have said. Please also know that we don’t work

for First 5 LA or PLN, so please tell us your thoughts and opinions, whether they are positive

or negative.

3. In addition, your participation here is entirely voluntary. You are free to leave at any time.

Also, your confidentiality will be completely protected. When we summarize the findings of

the group, all responses will be “anonymous” and none will be attributed to you.

4. I would really like to encourage everyone to participate. Each of you does not have to

answer each and every question, though, nor do you need to raise your hand to speak. If,

however, some of you are shy or I really want to know what you think, I may call on you.

5. It is important that only one person speak at a time. Let’s show each other the respect we

deserve and give everyone their chance to speak. Also, you may have noticed that we are

69

recording today’s discussion, so taking turns is important here too—if two people talk at

once, we won’t be able to understand the tape.

6. Now, about the recording. We’re recording the session because we don’t want to miss

anything. Even though we’ll be taking notes as fast as we can, I’m certain we won’t be able

to write everything down! So, the taping is simply a back-up, a tool to ensure that we get all

of your comments. Don’t worry, no one will be listening to these tapes besides the research

team; your confidentiality will be protected.

7. Now, I have a lot that I want to talk about today. So I may be forced, from time to time, to

interrupt the discussion and move us along to another topic. But, don’t let me cut you off! If

there’s something important you want to say, let me know before we change subjects.

8. Just a word about cell phones and bathrooms. Please either turn off your cell phone or put it

in “vibrate/silent” mode. If you need to use the bathroom, please do so at any time; you do

not need to ask permission. The bathrooms are located _________.

9. We will be on a first name basis today, and we’ve placed name cards on the table in front of

you to help us remember each other’s names.

10. Any questions? Okay, let’s begin.

Background Questions (10 – 15 minutes)

Let’s start by going around the table and introducing ourselves. I’d like each of you to tell us

your first name. Then, to break the ice, why don’t you share with all of us a little about yourself.

What is your personal connection to the Metro LA community?

What is your professional background?

Could you tell us a little bit about the mission of the organization that you work for? Is

your organization located within the boundaries of Metro LA?

70

Implementation Questions (30 – 45 minutes)

Once again, you are all here today because you received a Collaborative Partner Grant during the

first year of funding in 2011. I’d like to start off by talking about this funding opportunity and

your projects specifically. A bit later, we will talk about Best Start in Metro LA more generally.

1. What was your original proposal to Para Los Niños?

What service/activity did you propose to conduct in the community?

What was the structure/format of the project/program? (e.g. 1-day workshop, 10-week

seminar, kit, large event)

2. What were some of the implementation challenges you encountered? What about successes?

3. Approximately how many people participated in your program/project?

a. Was this more or less than you had expected?

4. How well do you feel this program addressed the needs of community members in Metro

LA?

a. What are your thoughts about how your programs/projects might target the community

better?

5. Are your programs/projects ongoing?

a. If not, when did this program end?

b. If ongoing, how it is being funded? When is this program scheduled to end?

6. Do you have plans to replicate the program? If so, where and with whom?

a. If so, how do you plan to fund the project? (PLN, First 5 LA, or some other source).

7. Did you receive a second-round collaborative partner grant in 2012?

8. Is it to fund the same project or a new one? If it is for a new project, what is that project?

71

Best Start in Metro LA (15-20 minutes)

I’d like to now ask you a few questions about your views on the Best Start LA initiative more

generally.

9. Let’s turn to talking about the Metro LA, the “pilot community” where Best Start LA has

been launched. How would you describe this community to someone who has never been

there before?

Tell me about its diversity, its families, its businesses, its services, or anything else that

comes to mind.

a. What would you say are Metro LA’s biggest strengths? What about the community’s

biggest weaknesses?

10. Think back to when you first heard about the Best Start LA initiative. How did you first hear

about it?

Did you hear about it through contact w/ Para Los Niños? First 5 LA?

Someone/somewhere else?

What, specifically, did you hear about it?

11. In your own words, what do you think the Best Start LA Initiative is trying to accomplish in

Metro LA? What are its objectives?

How do you feel about Best Start’s progress in Metro LA so far?

What would you like to see developed in the community as a result of Best Start, and

why?

12. Have you heard anything about the home visiting services being provided in Metro LA

through the Welcome Baby! program? Do you think the community is aware that these

services are being offered to new mothers? Do you know if they are working well or not?

13. Are you involved with any of the BSLA Community Partners (Hope Street, Maternal Child

Health Access, etc.)?

72

Lessons Learned (10-15 minutes)

Let’s wrap up by talking about some of the “lessons” you’ve learned thus far.

14. What did you like most about this short term/quick start grant program?

Time constraints for implementation?

Population targeted?

Funding levels?

15. What do you think could be done differently?

Time constraints for implementation?

Population targeted?

Funding levels?

Thank you

Those are all the questions that I have for you today. Is there anything else that anyone would

like to add that you think might be helpful for us?

Thank you very much for your time and your thoughts.


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