Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
Clinical Futures, PolicyLab, and The Possibilities Project, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Pennsilvania, United States.
Appl Clin Inform. 2023 May;14(3):439-447. doi: 10.1055/a-2062-9627. Epub 2023 Mar 27.
Research is needed to identify how clinical decision support (CDS) systems can support communication about and engagement with tobacco use treatment in pediatric settings for parents who smoke. We developed a CDS system that identifies parents who smoke, delivers motivational messages to start treatment, connects parents to treatment, and supports pediatrician-parent discussion.
The objective of this study is to assess the performance of this system in clinical practice, including receipt of motivational messages and tobacco use treatment acceptance rates.
The system was evaluated at one large pediatric practice through a single-arm pilot study from June to November 2021. We collected data on the performance of the CDS system for all parents. Additionally, we surveyed a sample of parents immediately after the clinical encounter who used the system and reported smoking. Measures were: (1) the parent remembered the motivational message, (2) the pediatrician reinforced the message, and (3) treatment acceptance rates. Treatments included nicotine replacement therapy, quitline referral (phone counseling), and/or SmokefreeTXT referral (text message counseling). We described survey response rates overall and with 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
During the entire study period, 8,488 parents completed use of the CDS: 9.3% ( = 786) reported smoking and 48.2% ( = 379) accepted at least one treatment. A total of 102 parents who smoke who used the system were approached to survey 100 parents (98% response rate). Most parents self-identified as female (84%), aged 25 to 34 years (56%), and Black/African American (94%), and had children with Medicaid insurance (95%). Of parents surveyed, 54% accepted at least one treatment option. Most parents recalled the motivational message (79%; 95% CI: 71-87%), and 31% (95% CI: 19-44%) reported that the pediatrician reinforced the motivational message.
A CDS system to support parental tobacco use treatment in pediatric primary care enhanced motivational messaging about smoking cessation and evidence-based treatment initiation.
需要研究如何使临床决策支持(CDS)系统能够支持在儿科环境中与吸烟的父母就烟草使用治疗进行沟通和参与。我们开发了一种 CDS 系统,可以识别吸烟的父母,向他们发送开始治疗的动机信息,将他们与治疗联系起来,并支持儿科医生与父母的讨论。
本研究的目的是评估该系统在临床实践中的性能,包括接收动机信息和接受烟草使用治疗的比率。
该系统通过 2021 年 6 月至 11 月的一项单臂试点研究在一家大型儿科诊所进行评估。我们收集了所有父母的 CDS 系统性能数据。此外,我们还对使用该系统的接受调查的父母进行了即时调查,并报告了吸烟情况。评估指标包括:(1)父母记住了激励信息,(2)儿科医生强化了信息,以及(3)治疗接受率。治疗方法包括尼古丁替代疗法、戒烟热线(电话咨询)和/或 SmokefreeTXT 推荐(短信咨询)。我们总体上和 95%置信区间(CI)描述了调查的回应率。
在整个研究期间,共有 8488 位父母使用了 CDS:9.3%(786 人)报告吸烟,48.2%(379 人)接受了至少一种治疗。共向使用该系统的 102 位吸烟父母提出调查 100 位父母(98%的回应率)。大多数接受调查的父母自我认定为女性(84%),年龄在 25 至 34 岁之间(56%),是黑人/非裔美国人(94%),并拥有医疗补助保险(95%)。接受调查的父母中,有 54%接受了至少一种治疗方案。大多数父母记得激励信息(79%;95%CI:71-87%),31%(95%CI:19-44%)报告儿科医生强化了激励信息。
在儿科初级保健中支持父母进行烟草使用治疗的 CDS 系统增强了关于戒烟和启动循证治疗的动机信息。