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What predicts improvements from home visits: Implementation fidelity or family enjoyment?

Abstract

Objective

This study examined how implementation fidelity to Recipe 4 Success, a preventive intervention embedded within home visits, was related to family enjoyment of those home visits and how both implementation fidelity and enjoyment were related to improvements in parents’ sensitive scaffolding and toddlers’ self-regulation.

Background

Implementation fidelity to evidence-based interventions is necessary for achieving intended benefits. However, home visitors may relax fidelity standards to ensure families are enjoying home visits.

Method

This study included 123 racially and ethnically diverse parents and their toddlers, most of whom were living in poverty. This study relied on a multimethod, multi-informant assessment battery that included audio recordings of home visits.

Results

This study found that (a) implementation fidelity and family enjoyment can complement one another (r = .22, p < .03), (b) both are related to improvements in multiple aspects of parents’ sensitive scaffolding (but not toddlers’ self-regulation), and (c) when the effects of implementation fidelity and family enjoyment were considered together, implementation fidelity was more likely to have unique benefits.

Conclusion

Implementation fidelity is related to more, not less, family enjoyment, and implementation fidelity is especially likely to contribute to improvements from home visits.

Implications

This study suggests that implementation fidelity can enhance families’ experiences with and gains from evidence-based interventions.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 01/20/2026 | Link to this post on IFP |
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