Suppr超能文献

社区合作预防伤害模式下,儿科急诊提供的安全设备使用的自我报告。

Self-Reported Usage of Safety Equipment Provided Through a Community Partnership Approach to Injury Prevention in the Pediatric Emergency Department.

机构信息

From the Division of Emergency Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Alabama-Birmingham.

University of Alabama-Birmingham School of Public Health, Birmingham, AL.

出版信息

Pediatr Emerg Care. 2022 Jul 1;38(7):e1391-e1395. doi: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000002760. Epub 2022 Jun 10.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Previous studies have shown that educational programs in conjunction with provision of free or low-cost safety equipment increases the likelihood of parents changing behaviors at home. This project surveyed caregivers in the pediatric emergency department (ED) about safety behaviors before and after provision of education and safety equipment related to medication storage, firearm storage, and drowning.

METHODS

A convenience sample of families presenting to the ED for any complaint with a child of any age were approached for participation in this feasibility study. Exclusion criteria included patients presenting for a high acuity problem (Emergency Severity Index 1 or 2) and non-English-speaking caregivers. Enrollment, surveys, and educational intervention were performed by the graduate student investigator from the School of Public Health. Participants were surveyed regarding presence of firearms and medications within the home and their storage practices. Additional questions included relationship to the patient, number and age of children younger than 18 years in the home, and zip code of residence. Educational handouts were reviewed, and participants were provided with a medication lock box, trigger lock, toilet lock, and/or pool watcher tag as indicated by answers given to the survey questions. Process measures were collected for number of products given out, number of children potentially affected by the intervention, and time spent by the investigator. Follow-up calls assessed use of the products provided.

RESULTS

The student investigator spent a total of 180 hours and enrolled 357 caregivers accounting for 843 children. Fifty-seven percent of the participants answered the follow-up phone call. Only 9% initially reported that they stored medications in a locked or latched place. Medication lock boxes were given to 316 participants. On follow-up, 88% of those who received a lock box reported using it to store medications and 86% reported satisfaction with the lock box and how it worked. Of the 161 participants who admitted to gun ownership, 45% reported storing their guns locked and unloaded. Of those who reported unsafe manners of gun storage, 96% also reported unsafe manners of medication storage. Although only 161 participants endorsed gun ownership, 236 participants took a gun lock when offered. At follow-up, 66% of participants had used the gun lock and 67% of participants who took the gun lock reported satisfaction with the device. For water safety, 195 toilet latches and 275 drowning prevention lanyards were provided. On follow-up, 48% of those who had received a toilet latch were using it and 62% reported satisfaction with the device. Data were not collected on use of or satisfaction with the drowning prevention lanyards.

CONCLUSIONS

Families often report unsafe home storage of medications and firearms, which together account for a large amount of morbidity and mortality in pediatrics. Drowning risk for young children is ubiquitous in the home setting, and low rates of use of home safety devices indicates need for further education and outreach on making the home environment safe. Despite relying on self-reported behaviors and the risk of reporting bias skewing the data, the behaviors reported in the preintervention survey were still very unsafe, suggesting that children may have a much higher risk of injury in the actual home environments. The ED is traditionally thought of as a place to receive care when injuries happen, but any encounter with families should be seen as an opportunity for injury prevention messaging. Partnering with a local school of public health and other community resources can result in the establishment of a low-cost, consistent, and effective injury prevention program in the pediatric ED that reaches a large number of individuals without the added burden of additional tasks that take time away from already busy ED providers and staff.

摘要

目的

先前的研究表明,教育计划结合提供免费或低成本的安全设备,可以增加家长在家中改变行为的可能性。本项目调查了儿科急诊部(ED)的护理人员,了解他们在提供与药物储存、枪支储存和溺水有关的教育和安全设备前后的安全行为。

方法

便利抽样选择了因任何年龄的孩子就诊而到 ED 的家庭参与这项可行性研究。排除标准包括因高度急性问题(急诊严重程度指数 1 或 2)就诊的患者和非英语为母语的护理人员。入学、调查和教育干预由公共卫生学院的研究生研究员进行。参与者被调查其家中是否有枪支和药物及其储存方式。其他问题包括与患者的关系、家中 18 岁以下的儿童人数和居住的邮政编码。审查了教育手册,并根据调查问题的回答,向参与者提供了药物保险箱、扳机锁、马桶锁和/或游泳池观察器标签。收集了产品发放数量、干预措施影响的儿童数量和研究员花费的时间等过程指标。通过随访电话评估所提供产品的使用情况。

结果

学生研究员总共花费了 180 个小时,招收了 357 名护理人员,涉及 843 名儿童。57%的参与者接听了随访电话。只有 9%的人最初报告他们将药物储存在上锁或闩锁的地方。给 316 名参与者发放了药物保险箱。随访时,88%收到保险箱的人报告说他们用它来储存药物,86%报告对保险箱及其工作方式满意。在承认拥有枪支的 161 名参与者中,45%报告将枪支锁好并卸弹。在报告不安全的枪支储存方式的人中,96%也报告了不安全的药物储存方式。尽管只有 161 名参与者表示拥有枪支,但 236 名参与者在提供枪支锁时拿走了。随访时,66%的参与者使用了枪支锁,67%的参与者对该设备表示满意。在水安全方面,发放了 195 个马桶锁和 275 个溺水预防系绳。随访时,48%收到马桶锁的人正在使用它,62%的人对该设备表示满意。没有收集关于溺水预防系绳使用情况或满意度的数据。

结论

家庭经常报告药物和枪支在家中不安全储存,这两者共同导致了儿科大量的发病率和死亡率。儿童在家中的溺水风险普遍存在,家用安全设备的低使用率表明需要进一步进行安全教育和宣传,以确保家庭环境安全。尽管依赖于自我报告的行为和报告偏见的风险会扭曲数据,但干预前调查中报告的行为仍然非常不安全,这表明儿童在实际家庭环境中可能面临更高的受伤风险。急诊部传统上被认为是受伤时接受治疗的地方,但与家庭的任何接触都应被视为预防伤害信息传递的机会。与当地公共卫生学院和其他社区资源合作,可以在儿科急诊部建立一个低成本、一致和有效的伤害预防计划,该计划可以覆盖大量人群,而不会给已经忙碌的急诊部提供者和工作人员增加额外的任务负担。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验