Pilot of primary care physician discussion and resource allocation after screening for unintentional injuries and social determinants of health

Abstract Background Standardized screening tools used by pediatric providers can help determine a child’s injury and social risks. This study determined if an office-based quality improvement program could increase targeted anticipatory guidance and community resource distribution to families. Metho...

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Main Authors: Sarah Denny, Mike Gittelman, Hayley Southworth, Samantha Anzeljc, Melissa Wervey Arnold
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-05-01
Series:Injury Epidemiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40621-019-0206-y
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spelling doaj-39e7648799d6470988a99ec67392a7be2020-11-25T03:34:08ZengBMCInjury Epidemiology2197-17142019-05-016S11910.1186/s40621-019-0206-yPilot of primary care physician discussion and resource allocation after screening for unintentional injuries and social determinants of healthSarah Denny0Mike Gittelman1Hayley Southworth2Samantha Anzeljc3Melissa Wervey Arnold4Division of Emergency Medicine, Nationwide Children’s HospitalDivision of Emergency Medicine, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical CenterAmerican Academy of Pediatrics, Ohio ChapterAmerican Academy of Pediatrics, Ohio ChapterAmerican Academy of Pediatrics, Ohio ChapterAbstract Background Standardized screening tools used by pediatric providers can help determine a child’s injury and social risks. This study determined if an office-based quality improvement program could increase targeted anticipatory guidance and community resource distribution to families. Methods Practices recruited from the Ohio Chapter, American Academy of Pediatrics’ database self-selected to participate in a quality improvement project. Two age-appropriate screening tools, corresponding talking points and local resources for birth–1 year and 1–5 year aged children were developed for unintentional injury and social health determinant topics. After a one-day learning session, practice teams implemented the tools into well-child care visits for children < 5 years of age. Two months of retrospective baseline data was collected for each participating clinician. During the 6-month collaborative, physicians randomly reviewed 5 screening tools monthly for each age category to identify injury and social risk discussions and to determine if resources were provided. Frequencies of counseling and resource distribution were calculated. Participating providers received Maintenance of Certification IV credit. Results Ten practices (18 providers) participated and 667 tools (n = 313, birth-1 year, n = 354, 1–5 year) were collected. For birth–1 year, the most common risky behaviors were related to unintentional injuries: no CPR training 164(52%), car seat not checked 149(48%) and home furniture not secured 117 (37%). For 1–5 year screens, unintentional injuries were also most common: no CPR training 222(63%), car seat not checked 203(57%) and access to choking hazards 198(56%). Families practiced riskier behaviors for unintentional injuries compared to social risks for both age groups (birth – 1 year, social 189/4801 (4%) vs. unintentional injury questions 999/6260 (16%) and 1–5 years, social 271/5451 (5%) vs unintentional injury questions 1140/6372 (18%). From baseline, discussions increased from 31% to 83% for birth – 1 year and 24% to 86% for 1–5 year families. Resource distribution increased by 63% for birth-1 year and 69% for 1–5 year families by pilot conclusion. Conclusions Using standardized screening tools in an office setting shows that families often practice unintentional injury risks more than having social concerns. After screening, appropriate resources can be provided to families to encourage behavior change.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40621-019-0206-yInjury preventionSocial determinants of healthAnticipatory guidanceScreening
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah Denny
Mike Gittelman
Hayley Southworth
Samantha Anzeljc
Melissa Wervey Arnold
spellingShingle Sarah Denny
Mike Gittelman
Hayley Southworth
Samantha Anzeljc
Melissa Wervey Arnold
Pilot of primary care physician discussion and resource allocation after screening for unintentional injuries and social determinants of health
Injury Epidemiology
Injury prevention
Social determinants of health
Anticipatory guidance
Screening
author_facet Sarah Denny
Mike Gittelman
Hayley Southworth
Samantha Anzeljc
Melissa Wervey Arnold
author_sort Sarah Denny
title Pilot of primary care physician discussion and resource allocation after screening for unintentional injuries and social determinants of health
title_short Pilot of primary care physician discussion and resource allocation after screening for unintentional injuries and social determinants of health
title_full Pilot of primary care physician discussion and resource allocation after screening for unintentional injuries and social determinants of health
title_fullStr Pilot of primary care physician discussion and resource allocation after screening for unintentional injuries and social determinants of health
title_full_unstemmed Pilot of primary care physician discussion and resource allocation after screening for unintentional injuries and social determinants of health
title_sort pilot of primary care physician discussion and resource allocation after screening for unintentional injuries and social determinants of health
publisher BMC
series Injury Epidemiology
issn 2197-1714
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract Background Standardized screening tools used by pediatric providers can help determine a child’s injury and social risks. This study determined if an office-based quality improvement program could increase targeted anticipatory guidance and community resource distribution to families. Methods Practices recruited from the Ohio Chapter, American Academy of Pediatrics’ database self-selected to participate in a quality improvement project. Two age-appropriate screening tools, corresponding talking points and local resources for birth–1 year and 1–5 year aged children were developed for unintentional injury and social health determinant topics. After a one-day learning session, practice teams implemented the tools into well-child care visits for children < 5 years of age. Two months of retrospective baseline data was collected for each participating clinician. During the 6-month collaborative, physicians randomly reviewed 5 screening tools monthly for each age category to identify injury and social risk discussions and to determine if resources were provided. Frequencies of counseling and resource distribution were calculated. Participating providers received Maintenance of Certification IV credit. Results Ten practices (18 providers) participated and 667 tools (n = 313, birth-1 year, n = 354, 1–5 year) were collected. For birth–1 year, the most common risky behaviors were related to unintentional injuries: no CPR training 164(52%), car seat not checked 149(48%) and home furniture not secured 117 (37%). For 1–5 year screens, unintentional injuries were also most common: no CPR training 222(63%), car seat not checked 203(57%) and access to choking hazards 198(56%). Families practiced riskier behaviors for unintentional injuries compared to social risks for both age groups (birth – 1 year, social 189/4801 (4%) vs. unintentional injury questions 999/6260 (16%) and 1–5 years, social 271/5451 (5%) vs unintentional injury questions 1140/6372 (18%). From baseline, discussions increased from 31% to 83% for birth – 1 year and 24% to 86% for 1–5 year families. Resource distribution increased by 63% for birth-1 year and 69% for 1–5 year families by pilot conclusion. Conclusions Using standardized screening tools in an office setting shows that families often practice unintentional injury risks more than having social concerns. After screening, appropriate resources can be provided to families to encourage behavior change.
topic Injury prevention
Social determinants of health
Anticipatory guidance
Screening
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40621-019-0206-y
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