“…Inadequate, or lack of, health insurance coverage, cost of program materials, and unstable funding sources for health-care agencies were the primary financial barriers (Dutton, 1982;Fire, 1990;Lawhorne, Zweig & Tinker, 1990;Spoth & Redmond, 1993a). Unavailability of services in the community, transportation problems, difficulty recruiting and retaining staff, insufficient community resources, insensitive and inappropriate practices for meeting family needs, community attitudes toward seeking help, inconvenient program features, and lack of interagency coordination contributed to structural barriers (Bedics, 1994;Dutton, 1982;Gibbons, 1990;Lamsam, 1993;Lawhorne et al, 1990;Lugo, 1993;Mack, 1989;McDiarmid, 1988;Orenstein, 1990;Patrick, Stein, Porta, & Ricketts, 1988;Shelton, 1987;Spoth & Redmond, 1993a;Weinert & Long, 1987). Personal barriers included lack of education and knowledge, family poverty and low income, personal attitudes towards seeking help and participating in education, personal lifestyle, mothers' labor force participation, and stressful events (Bedics, 1994;Dowswell & Hewison, 1993;Fire, 1990;Lamsam, 1993;National Commission on Infant Mortality, 1991;Spoth & Redmond, 1993b;Spoth & Redmond, in press).…”