Riese Alison, Mello Michael J, Baird Janette, Steele Dale W, Ranney Megan L
Injury Prevention Center of Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, RI; Pediatrics, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI.
Injury Prevention Center of Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, RI; Department of Emergency Medicine, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI.
Acad Pediatr. 2015 May-Jun;15(3):345-52. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2015.01.005.
Youth violence (YV) screening during primary care visits is not routinely performed. Electronic previsit questionnaires (PVQs) are viewed favorably by adolescents and can prompt disclosure and discussion of sensitive health topics. This study aimed to determine the efficacy of an electronic PVQ in prompting YV discussions.
A 4-month cluster-randomized controlled trial was conducted in a large urban academic primary care clinic. The clinic's 4 practice groups were randomized to intervention or control assignment. A consecutive sample of adolescents aged 13 to 19 years presenting for annual visits were recruited. Participants completed an electronic PVQ (TickiT) either with (intervention) or without (control) YV questions. PVQ results were delivered to physicians before the visit. The frequency of YV discussions was measured using exit surveys of adolescents. Patients who reported YV discussion rated the helpfulness of the discussion. Multilevel mixed effect logistic regression was conducted to compare likelihood of YV discussion between intervention and control groups.
A total of 183 adolescents (90% of eligible) participated. Overall, 30% of adolescents reported some YV involvement. Sixty-five percent of the intervention group and 42% of the control group reported discussing YV during their visit. Thirty-one percent of adolescents in the intervention group who disclosed YV involvement reported not having a YV discussion. The intervention group had 2.6 (95% confidence interval 1.2-5.6) times the odds of discussing YV. Sixty-six percent of adolescents who discussed YV with their doctor rated the discussion as very helpful.
An electronic PVQ with items related to YV is acceptable and feasible, and it significantly improves frequency of patient-provider YV discussion.
在初级保健就诊期间,青少年暴力(YV)筛查并非常规进行。电子就诊前问卷(PVQ)受到青少年的好评,并且可以促使他们披露和讨论敏感的健康话题。本研究旨在确定电子PVQ在促使进行YV讨论方面的效果。
在一家大型城市学术初级保健诊所进行了一项为期4个月的整群随机对照试验。该诊所的4个医疗小组被随机分配到干预组或对照组。招募了连续前来进行年度体检的13至19岁青少年样本。参与者完成了一份电子PVQ(TickiT),干预组的问卷包含YV问题,对照组则没有。PVQ结果在就诊前提供给医生。通过对青少年的出院调查来测量YV讨论的频率。报告进行了YV讨论的患者对讨论的帮助程度进行了评分。进行多水平混合效应逻辑回归以比较干预组和对照组之间进行YV讨论的可能性。
共有183名青少年(符合条件者的90%)参与。总体而言,30%的青少年报告有某种YV相关经历。干预组中有65%的青少年以及对照组中有42%的青少年报告在就诊期间讨论了YV。干预组中披露有YV相关经历的青少年中有31%报告未进行YV讨论。干预组进行YV讨论的几率是对照组的2.6倍(95%置信区间1.2 - 5.6)。与医生讨论了YV的青少年中有66%认为该讨论非常有帮助。
一份包含与YV相关条目的电子PVQ是可接受且可行的,并且它显著提高了医患之间YV讨论的频率。