| Literature DB >> 29546094 |
Maneesha Agarwal1, Janice Williams2, Demetrios Tavoulareas3, Jonathan R Studnek4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Increasing grandparent-grandchild interactions have not been targeted as a potential contributing factor to the recent surge in pediatric poisonings. We hypothesized that in grandparents with a young grandchild, a single educational intervention based on the PROTECT "Up & Away" campaign will improve safe medication knowledge and storage at follow-up from baseline.Entities:
Keywords: child; overdose; poisoning; prevention and control; safety
Year: 2015 PMID: 29546094 PMCID: PMC5690368 DOI: 10.3934/publichealth.2015.1.44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIMS Public Health ISSN: 2327-8994
Criteria for safe versus unsafe storage.
| Unsafe storage defined as: | ||||||
| 1. | Medicines in the kitchen NOT stored in cabinet above countertop OR NOT in drawer/cabinet secured with child safety lock. | |||||
| 2. | Medicines in the bathroom NOT stored in cabinet above countertop OR NOT in drawer/cabinet secured with child safety lock. | |||||
| 3. | Medicines in the bedroom NOT stored on shelving or surface above shoulder level OR NOT in drawer/cabinet secured with child safety lock. | |||||
| 4. | Handwritten responses indicating storage is on shelving located at surface or below shoulder level OR NOT in drawer/cabinet secured with child safety lock. OR responses without adequate detail to determine safe storage | |||||
Basic Poisoning Prevention Knowledge.
| Before Intervention | Immediately After Intervention | Delayed 50-90 Days After Intervention | OR for Delayed (95% CI) | |
| “Poisoning in young children is becoming a bigger problem.” | 76% | 98% | 95% | 7.3 (2.2–38.3) |
| “A child-resistant container means it is completely child-proof.” | 77% | 93% | 94% | 16.0 (2.5–671.0) |
| “One pill of a medicine can kill a child.” | 82% | 92% | 99% | 15.0 (2.3–631.5) |
| “If you think a child may have gotten into a medicine AND they do not have any symptoms, the best thing to do is” | ||||
| Call RN/MD | 7% | 0% | 0% | |
| Call poison control | 76% | 96% | 91% | |
| Call 9-1-1 | 8% | 3% | 5% | |
| Go to ER/Urgent Care | 8% | 2% | 4% | |
| “Do you have the Poison Center number readily available?” | 37% | 95% | 57.0 (9.8–2290.4) | |
All tested questions were statistically significant with p < 0.0125 corrected for multiple testing.
Demographics/Grandchild Interactions/ Medication Use and Storage of Recruited Participants.
| All participants, | ||
| Age (years), mean, standard deviation | 55.7, 6.4 | |
| Female | 111/120 | 93% |
| White race | 91/120 | 76% |
| Education * multiple degrees were indicated by some clinical added to college attainment. | ||
| General Educational Development/high school diploma | 13/120 | 11% |
| Some college, no degree | 35/120 | 29% |
| Associate degree | 17/120 | 14% |
| College degree | 33/120 | 28% |
| Post-graduate degree | 22/120 | 18% |
| Clinical degree (Registered Nurse, Pharmacy Tech, etc.) | 60/120 | 50% |
| Grandchild interactions | ||
| Grandchildren/participant, mean, range | 1.9, 1–7 | |
| Resides with grandchild | 21/119 | 18% |
| At least weekly grandchild visitation | 73/118 | 62% |
| At least weekly grandchild visitation | 50/114 | 44% |
| Medication availability | ||
| Medicines taken daily | ||
| 1–2 different medicines | 38/109 | 35% |
| 3–5 different medicines | 41/109 | 38% |
| 6–10 different medicines | 26/109 | 24% |
| 11+ different medicines | 4/109 | 4% |
| Medicine bottles in home | ||
| 1–2 bottles | 5/118 | 4% |
| 3–5 bottles | 19/118 | 16% |
| 6–10 bottles | 27/118 | 23% |
| 11–15 bottles | 31/118 | 26% |
| 16+ bottles | 36/118 | 31% |
| Storage devices | ||
| Uses pill organizers for medicines | 61/119 | 51% |
| Uses baggies for medicines | 7/119 | 6% |
| Exclusive storage of medicines in pill bottles | 51/119 | 43% |
| Travels with medicine | 80/112 | 71% |
| Medication Storage | ||
| In own home | ||
| Kitchen | 95/120 | 79% |
| Bathroom | 73/120 | 61% |
| Bedroom | 39/117 | 33% |
| In grandchild's home | ||
| Kitchen | 71/108 | 66% |
| Bathroom | 90/108 | 83% |
| Bedroom | 68/107 | 64% |
| Prior experience with a poisoning | 21/119 | 18% |
| Expressed intent to change storage on immediate post-intervention survey | 107/120 | 89% |
Safety of Medication Storage in Participants' Homes.
| Pre-Intervention Safe Storage | DelayedPost-Intervention Safe Storage | ||
| ALL Locations* | 23% | 48% | < 0.0001 |
| Participants' | 38% | 67% | |
| Home* | < 0.0001 | ||
| Kitchen* | 69% | 91% | < 0.0001 |
| Bathroom* | 80% | 94% | = 0.0003 |
| Bedroom* | 78% | 91% | = 0.0006 |
*Indicates statistically significant p < 0.0055, corrected for multiple testing
Safety of Medication Storage in Grandchildren's Homes.
| Pre-Intervention Safe Storage | DelayedPost-Intervention Safe Storage | ||
| Grandchild's Home* | 43% | 58% | = 0.0003 |
| Kitchen | 80% | 80% | = 0.2752 |
| Bathroom | 92% | 97% | = 0.0956 |
| Bedroom** | 78% | 89% | = 0.0093 |
*Indicates statistically significant p < 0.0055, corrected for multiple testing
**Delayed post-intervention data on bedroom storage was missing from one participant