Department of Pediatrics (A Vasan, DR Negro, S Virudachalam, CC Kenyon, and AG Fiks), Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; PolicyLab and Clinical Futures, Department of Pediatrics, (A Vasan, DR Negro, M Yazdani, L Benitez, S Virudachalam, CC Kenyon, and AG Fiks), Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Pa.
PolicyLab and Clinical Futures, Department of Pediatrics, (A Vasan, DR Negro, M Yazdani, L Benitez, S Virudachalam, CC Kenyon, and AG Fiks), Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Pa.
Acad Pediatr. 2024 May-Jun;24(4):619-626. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2024.02.008. Epub 2024 Feb 23.
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that pediatric providers screen families for food insecurity and connect them to appropriate resources. However, it is unclear how clinics can best provide families with resources consistent with their needs and preferences. In this study, we elicited caregiver preferences for clinic-based food assistance.
We conducted a cross-sectional discrete choice experiment in which caregivers at 2 pediatric primary care clinics were asked to choose between hypothetical food programs. Programs varied across 4 categories: 1) resources provided (eg, food delivery, food in clinic, assistance enrolling in benefits); 2) support staff providing resources (eg, social worker, community health worker, physician, or nurse); 3) outreach modality (eg, phone, email, text); and 4) outreach frequency. Multinomial logistic regression was used to assess caregiver preferences within each category and the relative importance of each category to caregiver decisions.
We surveyed 142 caregivers who were predominantly Black (87%) and Medicaid-insured (90%). Caregiver preferences for food programs were most strongly influenced by the food resources provided. Caregivers preferred food delivery over other forms of food supports, such as food provided in clinic. They preferred assistance from a benefits enrollment specialist, community health worker, or social worker to assistance from a physician or nurse.
Pediatric clinics serving families at risk of food insecurity should use caregiver preferences to inform the design of family-centered interventions. Clinics should consider connecting caregivers with food delivery programs, and pediatric payors should adopt reimbursement models that support multidisciplinary team-based care to address food insecurity.
美国儿科学会建议儿科医生对家庭进行粮食不安全筛查,并为其提供相应资源。然而,目前尚不清楚诊所如何才能最好地为家庭提供符合其需求和偏好的资源。在这项研究中,我们了解了照顾者对诊所提供的食品援助的偏好。
我们进行了一项横断面离散选择实验,其中 2 家儿科初级保健诊所的照顾者被要求在假设的食品方案中进行选择。方案在 4 个类别中有所不同:1)提供的资源(例如,食品配送、诊所内食品、协助注册福利);2)提供资源的支持人员(例如,社会工作者、社区卫生工作者、医生或护士);3)外展方式(例如,电话、电子邮件、短信);4)外展频率。多项逻辑回归用于评估每个类别中的照顾者偏好以及每个类别对照顾者决策的相对重要性。
我们调查了 142 名主要为黑人(87%)和医疗补助保险(90%)的照顾者。食品方案的照顾者偏好受提供的食品资源影响最大。与在诊所提供的其他形式的食品支持相比,照顾者更喜欢食品配送。他们更喜欢由福利登记专家、社区卫生工作者或社会工作者提供帮助,而不是由医生或护士提供帮助。
为面临粮食不安全风险的家庭服务的儿科诊所应使用照顾者的偏好来为以家庭为中心的干预措施提供信息。诊所应考虑为照顾者提供食品配送计划,儿科支付方应采用支持多学科团队合作的报销模式,以解决粮食不安全问题。