Department of Pediatrics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
J Adolesc Health. 2018 Sep;63(3):327-334. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2018.04.004. Epub 2018 Aug 7.
To evaluate a screening, brief intervention and referral to treatment curriculum for alcohol and other substance use developed, implemented and integrated into a pediatric residency program.
During a 1-month adolescent medicine rotation, pediatric, and medicine/pediatric residents in an urban teaching hospital completed a 2 1/2-hour formal curriculum including a didactic lecture, a 40-minute video describing the Brief Negotiation Interview (BNI), and a skill-based session practicing the BNI and receiving individualized feedback. Access to a website with didactic material was provided. Outcome measures were pre- and post-training knowledge, BNI performance measured with a standardized patient using a validated BNI adherence scale, satisfaction with training, and adoption of BNI into clinical practice.
Of the 106 residents trained, 92(87%) completed both pre- and post-test evaluations. Significant improvements were found in pre- versus post-test scores of knowledge, (20.0 [2.4 SD] vs. 24.1 [3.5 SD], p <.001) and BNI performance comparing pre- and post BNI adherence scale total scores, (5.14 [1.8 S.D.] vs. 11.5 [.96], p<.001). Residents reported high satisfaction with training, [1.4, SD .5, immediately and 1.6, SD .6, 30-days post training)with scores ranging from 1 to 5 with lower score=greater satisfaction. During the 12-month follow-up period, we received 83 responses from residents reporting a total of 129 BNIs in actual clinical settings.
A screening, brief intervention and referral to treatment curriculum was successfully integrated into an adolescent medicine elective in a pediatric residency program. Residents demonstrated significant improvements in knowledge and skills performing the BNI, with high satisfaction and adoption of the BNI into clinical practice.
评估一个为酒精和其他物质使用而开发、实施和整合到儿科住院医师培训计划中的筛选、简短干预和转介治疗课程。
在为期 1 个月的青少年医学轮转期间,城市教学医院的儿科、内科/儿科住院医师完成了 2 个半小时的正式课程,包括一次讲座、一个 40 分钟的视频,描述了简短谈判访谈(BNI),以及一个基于技能的课程,练习 BNI 并获得个性化反馈。提供了访问带有教学材料的网站的机会。结果测量是培训前后的知识、使用经过验证的 BNI 依从性量表的标准化患者测量的 BNI 表现、对培训的满意度以及将 BNI 纳入临床实践。
在接受培训的 106 名住院医师中,有 92 名(87%)完成了前后测试评估。知识的前后测试得分有显著提高(20.0 [2.4 标准差] vs. 24.1 [3.5 标准差],p <.001),并且 BNI 表现比较前后 BNI 依从性量表总分,(5.14 [1.8 标准差] vs. 11.5 [.96],p<.001)。住院医师对培训的满意度很高,[1.4,SD.5,立即和 1.6,SD.6,30 天培训后],评分范围为 1 到 5,分数越低表示满意度越高。在 12 个月的随访期间,我们收到了 83 名住院医师的回复,报告了他们在实际临床环境中总共进行的 129 次 BNI。
一个筛选、简短干预和转介治疗课程成功地整合到了儿科住院医师培训计划中的青少年医学选修课程中。住院医师在 BNI 表现方面的知识和技能有了显著提高,对 BNI 的满意度很高,并将其应用于临床实践。