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Home visiting is a service delivery strategy connecting parents & caregivers to a designated support person to help adults & children thrive.
What Is Home Visiting? Voluntary Home Visiting is an effective state strategy that connects expectant parents and parents of young children with a designated support person, like a trained nurse, social worker, or early childhood specialist.
Home visiting is a cost-effective strategy with a variety of measurable short- and long-term benefits to children, families, and communities.
Learn ways home visiting sets the stage for close, trusting relationships. Explore how it’s a key element in any program that supports children and their families and helps build healthy brain development.
Home visitors customize each visit, providing culturally and linguistically responsive services. The home visiting model allows home visitors to provide services to families with at least one parent or guardian at home with the child or children.
Home visiting is a prevention strategy used to support pregnant moms and new parents to promote infant and child health, foster educational development and school readiness, and help prevent child abuse and neglect.
Building on Strengths: Reaching Unhoused Families With Home Visiting Parent Support Programs. Home visiting is uniquely positioned to reach unhoused families and help them meet basic needs while supporting strong parenting skills and healthy child development.
Explore this handbook to find research on home-based programs, strategies for best practices, video examples, and resources, along with wisdom from home visitors across the country.
The Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting (MIECHV) program facilitates collaboration and partnership at the federal, state, and community levels to improve the health of at-risk children through evidence-based home visiting programs.
Home visits are an important part of the social services process. Through a home visit, social workers seek to assess the living environment and gain insight into the family’s welfare as well as identify any potential safety risks or concerns.