|
| Intervening | (agree 4–6/disagree 1–3) |
|
| PHNs discuss sufficiently well with families about | |
| Risk factors in families | 61/39% |
| Child rearing practices | 69/31% |
| Problems in the couple’s relationship | 52/48% |
| Problems in everyday life | 80/20% |
| Child development | 80/20% |
| Problems in child development | 79/21% |
| PHNs advice parents sufficiently well to | |
| Seek help when needed | 88/12% |
| Act well in situations when the child has a tantrum | 76/24% |
| Act well when the child behaves badly | 71/29% |
| Act well when the child does not fulfill expectations | 60/40% |
| Act well when the child has special needs or is ill | 69/31% |
| Act well when the child cries | 76/24% |
| Discuss their joint child rearing practices | 67/33% |
| When suspecting child maltreatment, PHN | |
| Asks about it straightforwardly | 69/31% |
| Always makes a child welfare notification | 86/14% |
| Helps the maltreated child sufficiently well | 52/48% |
| Helps the family sufficiently well | 50/50% |
| Documents maltreatment sufficiently well | 82/18% |
| Guides to follow-up treatment sufficiently well | 81/19% |
| Listens to the family under suspicion sufficiently well | 83/17% |
| Collaborates sufficiently well with other professionals | 86/14% |
| Thinks multiprofessional collaboration works well in the municipality | 59/41% |
| Thinks multiprofessional collaboration works well in their organization | 69/31% |
| Knows who to contact when suspecting child maltreatment | 87/13% |
| When suspecting child maltreatment PHN gets enough support from | |
| Superiors | 50/50% |
| Peers | 82/18% |
| The clinic physician | 69/31% |
| Child protection | 69/31% |
| In our clinic: | |
| We have joint instructions to handle child maltreatment cases | 54/46% |
| We have clear instructions on how to make a child welfare notification | 65/35% |
| It is possible to work according to the child maltreatment guideline | 59/41% |
|