McBain Ryan K, Levin Jonathan S, Matthews Samantha, Qureshi Nabeel, Long Dayna, Schickedanz Adam B, Gilgoff Rachel, Kotz Krista, Slavich George M, Eberhart Nicole K
Department of Medicine, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Division of Healthcare Delivery, RAND Corporation, Washington, DC, USA.
EClinicalMedicine. 2023 Oct 24;65:102282. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102282. eCollection 2023 Nov.
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) can have harmful, long-term health effects. Although primary care providers (PCPs) could help mitigate these effects, no studies have reviewed the impacts of ACE training, screening, and response in primary care.
This systematic review searched four electronic databases (PubMed, Web of Science, APA PsycInfo, CINAHL) for peer-reviewed articles on ACE training, screening, and/or response in primary care published between Jan 1, 1998, and May 31, 2023. Searches were limited to primary research articles in the primary care setting that reported provider-related outcomes (knowledge, confidence, screening behavior, clinical care) and/or patient-related outcomes (satisfaction, referral engagement, health outcomes). Summary data were extracted from published reports.
Of 6532 records, 58 met inclusion criteria. Fifty-two reported provider-related outcomes; 21 reported patient-related outcomes. 50 included pediatric populations, 12 included adults. A majority discussed screening interventions (n = 40). Equal numbers (n = 25) discussed training and clinical response interventions. Strength of evidence (SOE) was generally low, especially for adult studies. This was due to reliance on observational evidence, small samples, and self-report measures for heterogeneous outcomes. Exceptions with moderate SOE included the effect of training interventions on provider confidence/self-efficacy and the effect of screening interventions on screening uptake and patient satisfaction.
Primary care represents a potentially strategic setting for addressing ACEs, but evidence on patient- and provider-related outcomes remains scarce.
The California Department of Health Care Services and the Office of the California Surgeon General.
童年不良经历(ACEs)会对健康产生有害的长期影响。尽管初级保健提供者(PCP)可以帮助减轻这些影响,但尚无研究综述初级保健中ACE培训、筛查及应对措施的影响。
本系统综述检索了四个电子数据库(PubMed、科学网、美国心理学会心理学文摘数据库、护理学与健康领域数据库),以查找1998年1月1日至2023年5月31日期间发表的关于初级保健中ACE培训、筛查和/或应对措施的同行评审文章。检索仅限于初级保健环境中的初级研究文章,这些文章报告了与提供者相关的结果(知识、信心、筛查行为、临床护理)和/或与患者相关的结果(满意度、转诊参与度、健康结果)。从已发表的报告中提取汇总数据。
在6532条记录中,58条符合纳入标准。52条报告了与提供者相关的结果;21条报告了与患者相关的结果。50条纳入了儿科人群,12条纳入了成人。大多数讨论了筛查干预措施(n = 40)。讨论培训和临床应对干预措施的数量相等(n = 25)。证据强度(SOE)普遍较低,尤其是成人研究。这是由于依赖观察性证据、样本量小以及对异质性结果采用自我报告措施。SOE为中等的例外情况包括培训干预对提供者信心/自我效能的影响以及筛查干预对筛查接受度和患者满意度的影响。
初级保健是解决ACEs的潜在战略环境,但关于患者和提供者相关结果的证据仍然稀缺。
加利福尼亚医疗保健服务部和加利福尼亚州卫生局局长办公室。