Lynch T R, Wildman B G, Smucker W D
Department of Psychology, Kent State University, OH 44242, USA.
J Fam Pract. 1997 Mar;44(3):273-80.
Physician identification and management of psychosocial problems in children is related to parental disclosure. The purpose of this research was to evaluate a method of prompting parental disclosure of such problems and to determine the impact of parental disclosure on family physicians' identification of and intervention for childhood psychosocial problems.
Participants were parents and physicians of 60 children between the ages of 3 and 10 years attending an ambulatory care clinic of a community-based, university-affiliated family medicine training program. Parents completed the Child Behavior Checklist and also indicated whether psychosocial problems were discussed or managed. Physicians completed a checklist about the psychosocial status of the child and potential interventions for identified problems. One half of the participating parents formed the experimental group and were also asked to note their concerns on a Psychosocial Checklist for Children and to discuss these concerns with their child's physician; the other half of parents received no such checklist and acted as the control group. All interactions between parents and physicians were videotaped.
The number of parental psychosocial disclosures, but not the number of parents who disclosed them, was significantly higher for the experimental group. Physicians were three times as likely to identify a psychosocial problem and 10 times as likely to intervene when parents discussed psychosocial concerns.
Parents' disclosure of psychosocial concerns to their child's physician increases the likelihood of physicians identifying and intervening for these problems. The finding that physicians intervened for psychosocial problems even when they failed to record these problems suggests that research needs to focus on measuring both intervention and identification.
医生对儿童心理社会问题的识别与管理与家长的披露情况相关。本研究的目的是评估一种促使家长披露此类问题的方法,并确定家长披露对家庭医生识别和干预儿童心理社会问题的影响。
参与者为60名3至10岁儿童的家长和医生,这些儿童在一个以社区为基础、与大学相关的家庭医学培训项目的门诊就诊。家长完成儿童行为清单,并指出是否讨论或处理了心理社会问题。医生完成一份关于儿童心理社会状况及对已识别问题的潜在干预措施的清单。一半参与研究的家长组成实验组,还被要求在儿童心理社会清单上记录他们的担忧,并与孩子的医生讨论这些担忧;另一半家长没有收到这样的清单,作为对照组。家长与医生之间的所有互动都进行了录像。
实验组家长心理社会问题的披露数量显著更高,但披露问题的家长数量并非如此。当家长讨论心理社会问题时,医生识别心理社会问题的可能性增加了两倍,进行干预的可能性增加了10倍。
家长向孩子的医生披露心理社会问题,增加了医生识别和干预这些问题的可能性。即使医生未记录这些问题但仍对心理社会问题进行干预这一发现表明,研究需要关注对干预和识别的测量。