OveRcoming Adverse ChiLdhood Experiences (ORACLE): A Mixed Methods Intervention Co-design Study to Improve Outcomes for Children and Young People Experiencing or at Risk of Adversity
Julia R. Forman, Ruth McGovern, Sophie G. E. Kedzior, Harriet Boulding, Simon Barrett, Cassey Muir, Nicholas Kofi Adjei, Yoko V. Laurence, Tianne Haggar, Julia Fox-Rushby, David Taylor-Robinson, Eileen Kaner, Ingrid Wolfe

TL;DR
This study co-designed a multi-level intervention to prevent and reduce the impact of childhood adversity, focusing on family support and system-level changes.
Contribution
The novel contribution is a co-designed 'village-style' intervention with community health workers and a framework for addressing multiple adversities.
Findings
A three-level intervention model was developed involving individual, operational, and system/strategy levels.
Community health workers were identified as central to building relationships and advocating for families.
Assessments at universal touch points were proposed to enable early prevention and proportionate universalism.
Abstract
Childhood exposures to adversity are common and increase risk for negative health and social outcomes throughout the life course. There is limited evidence regarding interventions to prevent or reduce the impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), particularly for families with multiple adversities. Here we present the findings of mixed methods research to co-design a complex intervention to prevent adverse childhood experiences, and their impacts. Using established research methods, and the framework of the Medical Research Council (MRC) complex interventions development guidance, the work was conducted in four stages, shaped by stakeholder engagement and input at every stage. The first stage, Discover, was exploratory and employed evidence synthesis and quantitative (n = 11,564) and qualitative (n = 31) research methods to understand needs, experiences, and evidence gaps. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Policy Implementation Science · Child Abuse and Trauma · Family and Disability Support Research
