Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Department of Pediatrics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Department of Biomedical and Health Informatics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA; and
Department of Pediatrics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;
Pediatrics. 2016 May;137(5). doi: 10.1542/peds.2015-4185. Epub 2016 Apr 14.
We created a clinical decision support (CDS) tool and evaluated its feasibility, acceptability, usability, and clinical impact within the electronic health record to help primary care pediatricians provide smoking cessation treatment to parents/caregivers who smoke.
This prospective study of pediatric clinicians and parents was conducted at 1 urban primary care site. Clinicians received training in smoking cessation counseling, nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) prescribing, referral to an adult treatment program, and use of the CDS tool. The tool prompted clinicians to ask about secondhand smoke exposure, provide an electronic NRT prescription, and refer. Feasibility was measured by using electronic health record utilization data, and acceptability and usability were assessed with the use of clinician surveys. Parents reported clinical impact, including NRT accepted and used.
From June to August 2015, clinicians used the tool to screen for secondhand smoke exposure at 2286 (76%) of 3023 visits. Parent smokers were identified at 308 visits, and 165 parents (55% of smokers) were interested in and offered treatment. Twenty-four (80%) of 30 eligible pediatric clinicians used the tool. Ninety-four percent of clinicians surveyed (n = 17) were satisfied with the tool, and the average system usability scale score was 83 of 100 (good to excellent range). We reached 69 of 100 parents sampled who received treatment; 44 (64%) received NRT, and 17 (25%) were currently using NRT.
A CDS tool to help urban primary care pediatric clinicians provide smoking cessation treatment was feasible, acceptable, usable, and influenced clinical care. A larger scale investigation in varied practice settings is warranted.
我们创建了一个临床决策支持(CDS)工具,并在电子健康记录中评估了其在帮助初级保健儿科医生为吸烟的父母/照顾者提供戒烟治疗方面的可行性、可接受性、可用性和临床影响。
这项针对儿科临床医生和父母的前瞻性研究在一个城市初级保健场所进行。临床医生接受了关于戒烟咨询、尼古丁替代疗法(NRT)处方、转介到成人治疗计划以及使用 CDS 工具的培训。该工具提示临床医生询问二手烟暴露情况、提供电子 NRT 处方并转介。通过使用电子健康记录利用数据来衡量可行性,通过使用临床医生调查来评估可接受性和可用性。父母报告了临床影响,包括接受和使用 NRT。
从 2015 年 6 月到 8 月,临床医生在 3023 次就诊中的 2286 次(76%)使用该工具筛查二手烟暴露情况。在 308 次就诊中发现了父母吸烟者,其中 165 名父母(吸烟者的 55%)有兴趣并接受了治疗。30 名符合条件的儿科临床医生中有 24 名(80%)使用了该工具。接受调查的 17 名(94%)临床医生对该工具表示满意,系统可用性量表平均得分为 83 分(良好至优秀范围)。我们联系了接受治疗的 100 名父母中的 69 名;44 名(64%)接受了 NRT,17 名(25%)正在使用 NRT。
帮助城市初级保健儿科临床医生提供戒烟治疗的 CDS 工具是可行的、可接受的、可用的,并影响了临床护理。需要在不同的实践环境中进行更大规模的调查。