BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to investigate factors related to well-child visit noncompliance in an ethnically diverse family practice clinic population. METHODS: Participants included 146 parents (131 mothers and 15 fathers) of children aged 0 to 24 months who received care at a St. Paul residency clinic. Participants completed telephone surveys that asked about their demographic characteristics, attitudes toward well-child visits, whether the most recent planned well-child visit had been kept, and their own and their child's health characteristics. RESULTS: All participants thought that well-child visits were important, with immunizations being the highest rated reason for importance. Fourteen percent of parents said they had missed a recent well-child visit, mostly because they forgot. More than three fourths of parents believed visit reminders were helpful, and the preferred type of reminder was a telephone call. Noncompliance with well-child visits was associated with the parent's depressive symptoms, transportation difficulties, working at a job, having private (vs public) health insurance, and being older (vs younger). CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that well-child visit compliance might be enhanced by visit reminders and improved access to transportation. The relationship of well-child visit noncompliance to parental depressive symptoms, if verified in other populations, points to a need for greater surveillance of children/families who do not schedule or keep well-child visits.
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to investigate factors related to well-child visit noncompliance in an ethnically diverse family practice clinic population. METHODS:Participants included 146 parents (131 mothers and 15 fathers) of children aged 0 to 24 months who received care at a St. Paul residency clinic. Participants completed telephone surveys that asked about their demographic characteristics, attitudes toward well-child visits, whether the most recent planned well-child visit had been kept, and their own and their child's health characteristics. RESULTS: All participants thought that well-child visits were important, with immunizations being the highest rated reason for importance. Fourteen percent of parents said they had missed a recent well-child visit, mostly because they forgot. More than three fourths of parents believed visit reminders were helpful, and the preferred type of reminder was a telephone call. Noncompliance with well-child visits was associated with the parent's depressive symptoms, transportation difficulties, working at a job, having private (vs public) health insurance, and being older (vs younger). CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that well-child visit compliance might be enhanced by visit reminders and improved access to transportation. The relationship of well-child visit noncompliance to parental depressive symptoms, if verified in other populations, points to a need for greater surveillance of children/families who do not schedule or keep well-child visits.
Authors: Elizabeth R Wolf; Jennifer O'Neil; James Pecsok; Rebecca S Etz; Douglas J Opel; Richard Wasserman; Alex H Krist Journal: Ann Fam Med Date: 2020-01 Impact factor: 5.166
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Authors: Donald L Chi; Elizabeth T Momany; Michael P Jones; Raymond A Kuthy; Natoshia M Askelson; George L Wehby; Peter C Damiano Journal: BMC Pediatr Date: 2013-10-05 Impact factor: 2.125