| Literature DB >> 10729666 |
G E Cummings1, D Voaklander, J Vincenten, C Policicchio, K Borden.
Abstract
A pilot study to survey the attitudes of emergency department (ED) personnel regarding their role in injury prevention education in children and parents was conducted at a tertiary care trauma center. The survey consisted of 14 statements, asking staff members their level of agreement (from strongly agree to strongly disagree) on a forced-choice four-point scale. These were followed by two questions asking staff members to rank schools, physician's offices, emergency departments, and public health units on their value in providing injury prevention information to children and parents. Before the intervention (an in-service training program on the importance of documenting the circumstances of injury on a patient's chart), a 50% randomly selected sample of ED staff members was asked in May 1997 to complete the survey. After the data collection prepilot (4 months later), the remaining 50% was asked in September 1997 to complete the same questionnaire. Administration of the preintervention survey resulted in 53 of 62 surveys being returned (85%). The postintervention survey was completed by 35 of the 41 staff members still eligible (85%), those who were employed in the ED during the entire pilot project. There was no statistically significant difference between the pre- and post-pilot groups on any demographic characteristics. Staff members agreed least with the statement that ED physicians and staff members could impact the severity of injuries to children by providing counseling to parents (68.1% preintervention and 64.5% postintervention agreement). Of most significance was the fact that a lower percentage of staff members agreed postintervention that almost all injuries to children were avoidable. The emergency department was the lowest ranked information dissemination venue for both parents and children.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2000 PMID: 10729666 DOI: 10.1016/s0736-4679(99)00218-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Emerg Med ISSN: 0736-4679 Impact factor: 1.484