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Pacific Islands Families : First Two Years of Life Study—design and methodology Janis Paterson, Colin Tukuitonga, Max Abbott, Michael Feehan, Phil Silva, Teuila Percival, Sarnia Carter, Esther Cowley-Malcolm, Jim Borrows, Maynard Williams, Philip Schluter

By: Paterson, Janis.
Contributor(s): Tukuitonga, Colin | Abbott, Max | Feehan, Michael | Silva, Phil | [Percival, Teuila] | Carter, Sarnia | Borrows, Jim | Williams, Maynard | Schluter, Phil | Cowley-Malcolm, Esther Tumama.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: New Zealand Medical Journal.Publisher: New Zealand Medical Association, 2006Subject(s): CHILDREN | FATHERS | INFANTS | LONGITUDINAL STUDIES | MOTHERS | PACIFIC ISLANDS FAMILIES STUDY | PACIFIC PEOPLES | PASIFIKA | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: Click here to access online In: New Zealand Medical Journal, 2006, 119(1228): 63-80, 27 January 2006Summary: This paper describes the design and methodology of the PIF Study. 1708 mothers were identified, 1657 were invited to participate, 1590 (96%) consented to a home visit; and, of these, 1,477 (93%) were eligible for the PIF study. Of those eligible, 1,376 (93%) participated at 6-weeks, 1224 (83%) participated at 12-months, and 1144 (77%) participated at 24-months. No important differential attrition was observed. Paternal interviews and child assessments were conducted on 825 fathers and 1241 infants at 12-months and on 757 fathers and 1064 children at 24-months. .
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New Zealand Medical Journal, 2006, 119(1228): 63-80, 27 January 2006

This paper describes the design and methodology of the PIF Study. 1708 mothers were identified, 1657 were invited to participate, 1590 (96%) consented to a home visit; and, of these, 1,477 (93%) were eligible for the PIF study. Of those eligible, 1,376 (93%) participated at 6-weeks, 1224 (83%) participated at 12-months, and 1144 (77%) participated at 24-months. No important differential attrition was observed. Paternal interviews and child assessments were conducted on 825 fathers and 1241 infants at 12-months and on 757 fathers and 1064 children at 24-months.
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