| Literature DB >> 24463421 |
Mirjam Elisabeth Johanna van Beelen1, Tinneke Monique Jozef Beirens, Paul den Hertog, Eduard Ferdinand van Beeck, Hein Raat.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Injuries at home are a major cause of death, disability, and loss of quality of life among young children. Despite current safety education, required safety behavior of parents is often lacking. To prevent various childhood disorders, the application of Web-based tools has increased the effectiveness of health promotion efforts. Therefore, an intervention with Web-based, tailored, safety advice combined with personal counseling (E-Health4Uth home safety) was developed and applied.Entities:
Keywords: RCT; child; eHealth; injury; parent; prevention; primary care; safety
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24463421 PMCID: PMC3913924 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.2521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Flow diagram of the enrollment and follow-up of study participants.
Descriptive characteristics of the study samplea at baseline (N=1292).
| Characteristics | Total | Intervention | Control |
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| Mother is respondent, n (%) | 1209 (93.58) | 597 (92.85) | 612 (94.30) | .16 | |
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| Mother’s age (years), mean (SD) | 32.06 (4.63) | 32.08 (4.60) | 32.04 (4.67) | .92 |
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| Mother’s age (years), range | 19.00-48.00 | 20.00-48.00 | 19.00-47.00 |
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| Father’s age (years), mean (SD) | 34.51 (5.17) | 34.50 (5.14) | 34.52 (5.21) | .96 |
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| Father’s age (years), range | 21.00-56.00 | 22.00-56.00 | 21.00-55.0 |
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| .26 | |
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| High | 524 (40.62) | 254 (39.56) | 270 (41.67) |
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| Intermediate | 570 (44.19) | 280 (43.61) | 290 (44.75) |
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| Low | 196 (15.19) | 108 (16.82) | 88 (13.58) |
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| .17 | |
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| High | 470 (36.69) | 217 (34.17) | 253 (39.16) |
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| Intermediate | 524 (40.91) | 268 (42.20) | 256 (39.63) |
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| Low | 287 (22.40) | 150 (23.62) | 137 (21.21) |
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| Mother is employed | 1068 (83.44) | 512 (80.25) | 556 (86.60) | .002 |
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| Father is employed | 1214 (95.67) | 599 (94.93) | 615 (96.39) | .20 |
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| .67 | |
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| Dutch | 1142 (88.46) | 570 (88.65) | 572 (87.27) |
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| Other Western | 60 (4.65) | 32 (4.98) | 28 (4.32) |
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| Non-Western | 89 (6.89) | 41 (6.38) | 48 (7.41) |
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| .43 | |
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| Dutch | 1130 (87.94) | 566 (88.58) | 564 (87.31) |
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| Other Western | 65 (5.06) | 34 (5.32) | 31 (4.80) |
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| Non-Western | 90 (7.00) | 39 (6.10) | 51 (7.89) |
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| Single parent, n (%)d | 29 (2.26) | 13 (2.03) | 16 (2.49) | .58 | |
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| First child in family, n (%) | 622 (48.14) | 317 (49.30) | 302 (47.00) | .41 | |
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| Gender (boys), n (%) | 663 (51.32) | 317 (49.30) | 346 (53.31) | .15 | |
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| Age (months), mean (SD) | 7.21 (1.07) | 7.26 (1.08) | 7.17 (1.07) | .17 | |
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| Age (months), range | 4.73-11.56 | 4.73-11.56 | 4.76-11.47 |
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| Child can crawl, n (%) | 438 (33.98) | 231 (35.93) | 207 (32.04) | .14 | |
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| Child can walk, n (%) | 6 (0.47) | 3 (0.47) | 3 (0.47) | .99 | |
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| Main staircase present, n (%) | 1129 (87.52) | 564 (87.71) | 565 (87.33) | .83 | |
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| Windows a child can reach, n (%) | 470 (36.41) | 241 (37.48) | 229 (35.34) | .42 | |
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| Pond present, n (%) | 127 (11.07) | 65 (11.40) | 62 (10.75) | .72 | |
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| Private swimming pool present, n (%) | 41 (3.18) | 23 (3.58) | 18 (2.79) | .42 | |
aParticipants with complete data available at baseline and follow-up.
bDifferences between intervention condition and control condition, as measured at baseline, tested with independent-samples t test (continuous variables) and chi-square test (categorical variables).
cMissing data: n=20
dMissing data: n=2
eMissing data: n=11
fMissing data (mother): n=12; missing data (father): n=23
gMissing data: n=1
hMissing data: n=7
iMissing data (crawl): n=3; missing data (walk): n=2
jMissing data (staircase): n=2; missing data (window): n=1; missing data (pond): n=5; missing data (pool): n=4
Descriptive statistics of parents’ child safety behavior as measured at baseline and at follow-up for intervention and control condition (N=1292).
| Behavior | Baseline, % | Follow-up, % | |||||
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| Intervention condition | Control condition |
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| Unsafe top of staircasec | 407 (72.29) | 404 (72.14) | .96 | 137 (23.91) | 187 (32.19) | .002 |
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| Unsafe bottom of staircasec | 497 (88.12) | 504 (89.52) | .46 | 364 (63.53) | 418 (71.94) | .002 |
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| Unsafe top and bottom of staircasec | 510 (90.43) | 516 (91.65) | .47 | 395 (68.94) | 454 (78.28) | < .001 |
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| Unsafe windows a child can reachd | 139 (57.68) | 125 (54.59) | .50 | 97 (46.86) | 101 (51.53) | .35 |
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| Unsafe storage of cleaning products | 387 (60.19) | 401 (61.98) | .30 | 195 (30.33) | 259 (39.91) | .001 |
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| Unsafe storage of medicines | 247 (38.41) | 255 (39.41) | .90 | 193 (30.02) | 221 (34.16) | .14 |
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| Unsafe bathing of the childe | 36 (5.74) | 40 (6.29) | .68 | 141 (23.46) | 198 (32.25) | .001 |
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| Unsafe pondf | 54 (88.52) | 49 (81.67) | .29 | 41 (77.36) | 41 (77.36) | .99 |
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| Unsafe swimming poolg | 19 (82.61) | 15 (83.33) | .95 | 6 (50.00) | 11 (78.57) | .13 |
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| Unsafe swimmingh | 253 (64.38) | 256 (65.14) | .82 | 288 (51.61) | 299 (52.73) | .71 |
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| Unsafe hot water taps in bath/shower | 188 (30.18) | 176 (27.76) | .35 | 167 (26.09) | 162 (25.16) | .70 |
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| Unsafe drinking hot fluids | 351 (54.67) | 328 (50.85) | .17 | 224 (34.84) | 270 (41.73) | .01 |
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| Unsafe cooking (not using a stove guard) | 628 (97.82) | 619 (96.12) | .08 | 591 (92.49) | 610 (94.57) | .13 |
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| Unsafe cooking (child in kitchen) | 412 (64.27) | 418 (64.81) | .84 | 583 (91.24) | 601 (93.18) | .19 |
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| Unsafe cooking (not using rear burners on stove) | 589 (91.89) | 576 (89.86) | .21 | 507 (79.34) | 550 (85.27) | .005 |
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| Unsafe cooking (not turning pan handles away) | 334 (52.11) | 321 (50.00) | .45 | 174 (27.27) | 183 (28.33) | .67 |
aMann-Whitney U test for continuous outcome, chi-square test for binominal outcomes.
bOnly when applicable, such as a staircase is present (n=1154), a window a child can reach is present (n=404), the child is bathed (n=1220), a pond is present (n=106), a private swimming pool is present (n=26), or the child swims (n=1134).
cBaseline intervention: n=564, baseline control: n=565; follow-up intervention: n=573, follow-up control: n=581.
dBaseline intervention: n=241, baseline control: n=229; follow-up intervention: n=207, follow-up control: n=197.
eBaseline intervention: n=629, baseline control: n=637; follow-up intervention: n=601, follow-up control: n=619.
fBaseline intervention: n=65, baseline control: n=62; follow-up intervention: n=53, follow-up control: n=53.
gBaseline intervention: n=23, baseline control: n=18; follow-up intervention: n=12, follow-up control: n=14.
hBaseline intervention: n=402, baseline control: n=395; follow-up intervention: n=564, follow-up control: n=570.
Outcomes of logistic regression analyses and linear regression analysis of the effect of E-Health4Uth home safety intervention on unsafe behavior at follow-up, with control condition as reference (N=1292).
| Behavior | OR (95% CI)a |
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| Top of staircase | 0.65 (0.50, 0.85) | .001 |
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| Bottom of staircase | 0.69 (0.53, 0.88) | .003 |
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| Top and bottom of staircase | 0.62 (0.48, 0.81) | < .001 |
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| Windows a child can reach | 0.86 (0.58, 1.27) | .44 |
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| Storage of cleaning products | 0.67 (0.53, 0.85) | .001 |
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| Storage of medicines | 0.88 (0.69, 1.12) | .30 |
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| Bathing of the child | 0.65 (0.51, 0.84) | .001 |
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| Pond | 1.12 (0.44, 2.83) | .82 |
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| Private swimming pool | 0.27 (0.05, 1.51) | .14 |
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| Swimming | 0.98 (0.77, 1.24) | .87 |
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| Hot water taps in bath/shower | 1.05 (0.82, 1.35) | .73 |
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| Drinking hot fluids | 0.76 (0.61, 0.96) | .02 |
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| Cooking (using a stove guard) | 0.76 (0.48, 1.20) | .23 |
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| Cooking (child in kitchen) | 0.81 (0.54, 1.23) | .33 |
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| Cooking (using rear burners) | 0.67 (0.50, 0.90) | .008 |
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| Cooking (turning pan handles away) | 0.94 (0.74, 1.20) | .63 |
aLogistic regression analyses with unsafe behavior as dependent variable and group (intervention condition vs control condition) as independent variable, adjusted for mother’s employment status.
bOnly when applicable, such as a staircase is present (n=1154), a window a child can reach is present (n=404), the child is bathed (n=1220), a pond is present (n=106), a private swimming pool is present (n=26), or the child swims (n=1134).
cLinear regression analyses with unsafe behavior as dependent variable and group (intervention condition vs control condition) as independent variable, adjusted for mother’s employment status.
Evaluation of the E-Health4Uth home safety module by parents in the intervention condition immediately after completing the module (n=541).
| Subject | n (%)/mean (SD) | |
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| Have read their advice completely | 369 (72.07) |
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| Have read their advice partly | 125 (24.41) |
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| Have not read their advice | 18 (3.52) |
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| The safety advice was reliablea | 4.19 (0.75) |
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| The safety advice was understandablea | 4.36 (0.60) |
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| The safety advice was relevanta | 3.53 (0.92) |
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| The safety advice was usefula | 3.90 (0.77) |
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| The safety advice motivated to take actiona | 3.60 (0.90) |
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| Completed an implementation-intention plan, n (%) | 322 (68.80) |
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| Completed a second implementation-intention plan, n (%) | 146 (31.20) |
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| Was it easy to complete an implementation-intention plan?, mean (SD)a | 4.08 (0.79) |
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| Minutes spent to answer the questions and read the safety advicea | 14.44 (7.08) |
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| Did you think that the time spent to answer the questions and read the safety advice was (very) long or (very) short?a | 3.20 (0.56) |
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| Was the intervention easy to use?a | 4.05 (0.62) |
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| Was the intervention a pleasant source of information?a | 3.67 (0.78) |
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| Rating for the Web-based, tailored safety advice interventionb | 7.28 (1.14) |
aScores on a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (most negative) to 5 (most positive).
bScores from 1 (most negative) to 10 (most positive).
Evaluation of the well-baby visit including discussing the tailored safety advice by parents in the intervention condition (n=196) and health care professionals (n=238) immediately after the well-baby visit.
| Subject | n (%)/mean (SD) | |
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| Satisfaction with information discusseda | 4.38 (0.62) |
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| Discussing the tailored safety advice was a valuable supplement to the tailored safety advice?a | 3.82 (0.87) |
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| Overall satisfaction with the well-baby visita | 4.38 (0.62) |
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| Rating for the well-baby visitb | 8.20 (0.87) |
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| Total time for well-baby visit (min), mean (SD) | 20.40 (4.51) |
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| Time for safety during well-baby visit (min), mean (SD) | 5.70 (2.27) |
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| Safety information leaflet given to the parent, n (%) | 170 (72.03) |
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| Tailored safety advice present in dossier, n (%) | 209 (87.82) |
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| Tailored safety advice brought by parent, n (%) | 51 (21.61) |
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| Was the tailored safety advice useful to discuss safety at home during the well-baby visit?, mean (SD)a | 3.77 (0.77) |
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| Satisfaction with information given, mean (SD)a | 3.98 (0.64) |
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| Overall satisfaction with the well-baby visit, mean (SD)a | 4.01 (0.62) |
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| Rating for the well-baby visit, mean (SD)b | 7.30 (0.79) |
aScores on a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (most negative) to 5 (most positive).
bScores from 1 (most negative) to 10 (most positive).