Abstract

In child health promotion (CHP) programmes it is the public health nurse who is responsible for most of the work. However, the perspectives of the family and the staff must be identified in order to get a comprehensive picture of significant quality factors in child healthcare. One aim of this study was to assess the views of mothers and public health nurses concerning a CHP programme and the first home visit to parents of newborn children. Other aims were to compare mothers' and nurses' views of CHP programmes in relation to age, experience, structure of organization and urbanization, and mothers' views in relation to social position, health of the children, primi- or multipara, country of birth and urbanization. Two national postal questionnaires, one sent to the mothers (850), the other to public health nurses (291), yielded data for analysis. Both mothers' and public health nurses' views of what constitutes good child healthcare were found to concur with the official goals of child health promotion. Important quality indicators were said to be: kind treatment, competence, time, support, an all-round view, the individual perspective, and home visits to primipara parents.

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