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Research shows that family-centred care effectively improves health outcomes such as child development, parent-child interaction, parent well-being and capabilities, and family functioning1,2. Family involvement in the decision-making processes of treatment is particularly key to managing child developmental issues requiring long-term care.
Delivering family-centred care for children requires working closely with care providers and parents; equipping them with skills to effect change in a child’s daily routines, and to teach the child new skills and behaviours at home or in school. In addition to possessing content knowledge, practitioners also need to harness the soft skills of working with patients and their caregivers, to enable them to clearly elicit concerns and set goals that matter to the family.
Overcoming barriers to elicit change
This can be difficult to do well – especially if caregivers lack an understanding of their child’s needs, believe that the child will “grow out of difficulties with time” or have a busy work schedule, elderly parents or other children to care for, and other barriers that hinder them from embarking on the change process. These situations are common when working with families and highlight how explanation or prescriptive advice alone might not always be sufficient to motivate caregivers to change their behaviours.
The Relational-Invitational Approach (RIA) is a professional practice framework for health and community care practitioners to intentionally invite caregivers and adults involved in the care of children, to collaborate towards effecting and maintaining behavioural changes necessary for optimal outcomes in the family.
Developed by Mr Warren Cann from the Parenting Research Centre, Australia, it provides a wide range of step-by-step tools, strategies and best practices to encourage practitioners and caregivers to build trust and respect, and form an egalitarian relationship towards sustainable change.
Challenges in practicing family-centred care
Working closely with caregivers on a family-centred approach to child development for more than 25 years, KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital (KKH) has observed the following common challenges:
Professional provider:
Caregiver:
RIA training programme for care practitioners
The KKH Department of Child Development (DCD) runs the RIA training programme to provide a structured framework to support health and community care practitioners in engaging families they work with. It is rooted in the foundations of adult capacity building, family-centred practice, a strengths-based approach, and taking on the role of a coach.
The programme helps to orientate practitioners to use a more collaborative and intentionally invitational approach to work with caregivers and other adults. It is also useful to help practitioners navigate issues relating to difficulties in engaging parents and identify explicit strategies for problem solving.
The RIA training programme comprises:
To date, more than 200 practitioners in Singapore ranging across professions including allied health professionals, doctors, nurses and learning support educators, have benefited from the programme.
Join the Relational-Invitational Approach (RIA) Training Programme
Register for upcoming RIA training sessions in 2026. For queries or indication of interest, please reach out to the team at [email protected].
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