Objective: Public health nurses in Norway provide a range of health promotion and primary prevention services to families in the postpartum period. The study objectives were to describe parents' experiences of: 1) being introduced to the Circle of Security Parenting program during a home visit and 2) participating in a parent group meeting.
Design: Qualitative descriptive study.
Sample: A purposeful sample of 24 caregivers (n = 15 mothers, n = 9 fathers) parenting an infant.
Measures: In-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted to document participants experiences. Content analysis was used to code and categorize the data.
Findings: Three main categories with seven subcategories reflected the parents' experiences: 1) Confidence-building home visit, 2) Awareness-raising parental group, 3) Dissemination of knowledge.
Conclusions: The parents experienced the home visit as being on their family's terms and reassuring. The parental group session started a reflection process which made them aware of the importance of being present for their child, how to modify their communication and have a common understanding of childrearing. The parents thought the group was a great way to introduce the Circle of Security Parenting program and experienced it as a continuation of the information presented at the home visit. The introduction provided them with new knowledge.
Keywords: Circle of Security Parenting; child health clinic; home visit; parental groups; public health nursing.
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