University of Michigan Injury Prevention Center, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI.
Acad Emerg Med. 2018 Nov;25(11):1204-1215. doi: 10.1111/acem.13495. Epub 2018 Oct 31.
Violence is one of the leading causes of death among youth ages 14 to 24. Hospital- and emergency department (ED)-based violence prevention programs are increasingly becoming a critical part of public health efforts; however, evaluation of prevention efforts is needed to create evidence-based best practices. Retention of study participants is key to evaluations, although little literature exists regarding optimizing follow-up methods for violently injured youth. This study aims to describe the methods for retention in youth violence studies and the characteristics of hard-to-reach participants.
The Flint Youth Injury (FYI) Study is a prospective study following a cohort of assault-injured, drug-using youth recruited in an urban ED, and a comparison population of drug-using youth seeking medical or non-violence-related injury care. Validated survey instruments were administered at baseline and four follow-up time points (6, 12, 18, and 24 months). Follow-up contacts used a variety of strategies and all attempts were coded by type and level of success. Regression analysis was used to predict contact difficulty and follow-up interview completion at 24 months.
A total of 599 patients (ages 14-24) were recruited from the ED (mean ± SD age = 20.1 ± 2.4 years, 41.2% female, 58.2% African American), with follow-up rates at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months of 85.3%, 83.7% 84.2%, and 85.3%, respectively. Participant contact efforts ranged from two to 53 times per follow-up time frame to complete a follow-up appointment, and more than 20% of appointments were completed off site at community locations (e.g., participants' homes, jail/prison). Participants who were younger (p < 0.05) and female (p < 0.01) were more likely to complete their 24-month follow-up interview. Participants who sought care in the ED for assault injury (p < 0.05) and had a substance use disorder (p < 0.01) at baseline required fewer contact attempts to complete their 24-month follow-up, while participants reporting a fight within the immediate 3 months before their 24-month follow-up (p < 0.01) required more intensive contact efforts.
The FYI study demonstrated that achieving high follow-up rates for a difficult-to-track, violently-injured ED population is feasible through the use of established contact strategies and a variety of interview locations. Results have implications for follow-up strategies planned as part of other violence prevention studies.
在 14 至 24 岁的青少年中,暴力是导致死亡的主要原因之一。以医院和急诊部(ED)为基础的预防暴力计划日益成为公共卫生工作的重要组成部分;然而,需要对预防工作进行评估,以制定基于证据的最佳实践。研究参与者的保留率是评估的关键,尽管很少有文献涉及优化暴力受伤青少年的随访方法。本研究旨在描述青年暴力研究中的保留方法以及难以接触到的参与者的特征。
弗林特青年伤害(FYI)研究是一项前瞻性研究,对在城市 ED 中招募的因袭击受伤、吸毒的青年和寻求医疗或非暴力伤害护理的吸毒青年对照组进行了随访。在基线和四个随访时间点(6、12、18 和 24 个月)进行了经过验证的调查工具。使用各种策略进行随访联系,所有尝试均按类型和成功程度进行编码。回归分析用于预测 24 个月时的联系困难和随访访谈完成情况。
从 ED 共招募了 599 名患者(年龄 14-24 岁,平均年龄±标准差为 20.1±2.4 岁,41.2%为女性,58.2%为非裔美国人),6、12、18 和 24 个月的随访率分别为 85.3%、83.7%、84.2%和 85.3%。参与者的联系努力范围从每个随访时间框架的两次到 53 次,以完成随访预约,超过 20%的预约是在社区地点(例如,参与者的家、监狱/监狱)完成的。年龄较小(p<0.05)和女性(p<0.01)的参与者更有可能完成 24 个月的随访访谈。在 ED 因袭击受伤就诊的参与者(p<0.05)和基线时存在物质使用障碍的参与者(p<0.01)完成 24 个月随访所需的联系次数更少,而在 24 个月随访前 3 个月内报告打架的参与者(p<0.01)需要更密集的联系努力。
FYI 研究表明,通过使用既定的联系策略和各种访谈地点,对于难以跟踪的、暴力受伤的 ED 人群,实现高随访率是可行的。结果对作为其他暴力预防研究计划一部分的随访策略具有启示意义。