Nurse-Family Partnership
| Founded | 1970s |
|---|---|
| Founder | David Olds |
| Type | NGO (501(c)(3)) |
| Location | |
Area served | United States |
| Services | provides home visits from registered nurses to low-income first-time mothers |
Key people | Frank Daidone (President and CEO), Charlotte Min-Harris (Chief Operating Officer), Elizabeth Slater Jasper (Chief Legal Officer, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary), Alison Kolwaite (Chief of External Affairs), Sarah McGee (Chief Policy and Government Affairs Officer), Kate Siegrist (Chief Nursing Officer), Tony Troxell (Chief Financial Officer) |
| Website | www |
Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP) is a non-profit organization operating in the United States that connects mothers pregnant with their first child with registered nurses, who provide home visits until the child's second birthday. NFP intervention has been associated with improvements in maternal health, child health, and economic security.
NFP started as a randomized control trial. The trial was conducted in a predominantly white, low-income neighborhood, located in Elmira, New York, in the late 1970s. For three consecutive decades, Professor David Olds and his colleagues conducted three similar randomized control trials, gathering research from each trial, which later contributed to the evidence-based development of the NFP. Randomized controlled trials were conducted in Elmira, New York; Memphis, Tennessee; and Denver, Colorado. The outcome of these trials proved that the NFP provided a tremendous number of benefits to children born in poverty stricken environments (Mason, 2016). Many of the families that participate in these trials had been experiencing many adversities, traumatic lifestyles events, and exposed to environments that were harmful to themselves and potentially harmful for their child. These parents expressed deep desires to protect and nurture their children and the NFP nurses facilitated resources and provided motivation to help change and eliminate these adversities to help create a better lifestyle and growing environment for both the parent and the child (Rowe, 2016).