Gooding Holly C, Cheever Elizabeth, Forman Sara F, Hatoun Jonathan, Jooma Farah, Touloumtzis Currie, Vernacchio Louis
Division of Adolescent/Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Adolesc Health. 2017 May;60(5):606-611. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2016.12.002. Epub 2017 Jan 18.
Routine screening for disordered eating or body image concerns is recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics. We evaluated the ability of two educational interventions to increase screening for eating disorders in pediatric primary care practice, predicting that the "active-learning" group would have an increase in documented screening after intervention.
We studied 303 practitioners in a large independent practice association located in the northeastern United States. We used a quasi-experimental design to test the effect of printed educational materials ("print-learning" group, n = 280 participants) compared with in-person shared learning followed by on-line spaced education ("active-learning" group, n = 23 participants) on documented screening of adolescents for eating disorder symptoms during preventive care visits. A subset of 88 participants completed additional surveys regarding knowledge of eating disorders, comfort screening for, diagnosing, and treating eating disorders, and satisfaction with their training regarding eating disorders.
During the preintervention period, 4.5% of patients seen by practitioners in both the print-learning and active-learning groups had chart documentation of screening for eating disorder symptoms or body image concerns. This increased to 22% in the active-learning group and 5.7% in the print-learning group in the postintervention period, a statistically significant result. Compared with print-learning participants, active-learning group participants had greater eating disorder knowledge scores, increases in comfort diagnosing eating disorders, and satisfaction with their training in this area.
In-person shared learning followed by on-line spaced education is more effective than print educational materials for increasing provider documentation of screening for eating disorders in primary care.
美国儿科学会建议对饮食失调或身体形象问题进行常规筛查。我们评估了两种教育干预措施在儿科初级保健实践中增加饮食失调筛查的能力,预计“主动学习”组在干预后记录的筛查次数会增加。
我们在美国东北部一个大型独立执业协会中研究了303名从业者。我们采用准实验设计,测试印刷教育材料(“印刷学习”组,n = 280名参与者)与面对面共享学习后进行在线间隔教育(“主动学习”组,n = 23名参与者)对预防保健就诊期间青少年饮食失调症状记录筛查的效果。88名参与者的一个子集完成了关于饮食失调知识、饮食失调筛查、诊断和治疗的舒适度以及对饮食失调培训满意度的额外调查。
在干预前阶段,印刷学习组和主动学习组的从业者诊治的患者中,有4.5%的患者有饮食失调症状或身体形象问题筛查的病历记录。在干预后阶段,主动学习组这一比例增至22%,印刷学习组为5.7%,这是一个具有统计学意义的结果。与印刷学习参与者相比,主动学习组参与者的饮食失调知识得分更高,诊断饮食失调的舒适度增加,并且对该领域的培训满意度更高。
面对面共享学习后进行在线间隔教育在增加初级保健中饮食失调筛查的提供者记录方面比印刷教育材料更有效。