C D Johnson1, J A Fein, C Campbell, K R Ginsburg. 1. The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and Department of Pediatrics, The University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, 19104, USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To measure the effect of a violence prevention program on pediatric residents' violence prevention guidance during well-child visits. DESIGN: Prospective study of an educational intervention. SETTING: Inner-city tertiary care hospital and satellite site. PARTICIPANTS: Pediatric residents. INTERVENTIONS: A 2(1/2)-hour violence prevention program, consisting of an introductory talk, role playing, a printed resident guide, and supplemental reading materials. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Parent or guardian report of violence prevention guidance offered during the well-child visit, using a postvisit survey. RESULTS: Three hundred eight patient encounters were included in the survey: 93 prior to the program, 106 just afterward, and 109 after 6 months. Before the program, guns or violence was discussed at 9.7% of visits; this increased to 19.1% of visits after the program (odds ratio, 2.20; 95% confidence interval, 1.02-4.74). The improvement was sustained 6 months after the program. More than 80% of residents felt the program increased their fund of knowledge and taught them skills, and 93% stated that they would use these skills in the future. CONCLUSION: This one-time educational intervention significantly increased the amount of violence prevention guidance provided by pediatric residents to their patients and families. The effect was sustained after 6 months. Residents regarded the program as a successful method of providing the skills and knowledge needed to address the issue of interpersonal violence in their primary care encounters.
OBJECTIVE: To measure the effect of a violence prevention program on pediatric residents' violence prevention guidance during well-child visits. DESIGN: Prospective study of an educational intervention. SETTING: Inner-city tertiary care hospital and satellite site. PARTICIPANTS: Pediatric residents. INTERVENTIONS:A 2(1/2)-hour violence prevention program, consisting of an introductory talk, role playing, a printed resident guide, and supplemental reading materials. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Parent or guardian report of violence prevention guidance offered during the well-child visit, using a postvisit survey. RESULTS: Three hundred eight patient encounters were included in the survey: 93 prior to the program, 106 just afterward, and 109 after 6 months. Before the program, guns or violence was discussed at 9.7% of visits; this increased to 19.1% of visits after the program (odds ratio, 2.20; 95% confidence interval, 1.02-4.74). The improvement was sustained 6 months after the program. More than 80% of residents felt the program increased their fund of knowledge and taught them skills, and 93% stated that they would use these skills in the future. CONCLUSION: This one-time educational intervention significantly increased the amount of violence prevention guidance provided by pediatric residents to their patients and families. The effect was sustained after 6 months. Residents regarded the program as a successful method of providing the skills and knowledge needed to address the issue of interpersonal violence in their primary care encounters.
Authors: Paul J D Roszko; Jonathan Ameli; Patrick M Carter; Rebecca M Cunningham; Megan L Ranney Journal: Epidemiol Rev Date: 2016-02-08 Impact factor: 6.222
Authors: Caitlin Naureckas Li; Chana A Sacks; Kyle A McGregor; Peter T Masiakos; Michael R Flaherty Journal: Acad Pediatr Date: 2019-03-07 Impact factor: 3.107