| Literature DB >> 32660527 |
Aditi Vasan1,2,3, Polina Krass4,5,6, Leah Seifu4, Talia A Hitt4, Nadir Ijaz4,7, Leonela Villegas4, Kathryn Pallegedara4, Sindhu Pandurangi4,8, Morgan Congdon4, Beth Rezet4, Chén C Kenyon4,6,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Advocacy regarding child health policy is a core tenet of pediatrics. Previous research has demonstrated that most pediatric providers believe collective advocacy and political involvement are essential aspects of their profession, but less is known about how pediatric providers engage with families about policy issues that impact child health. The objectives of this study were to examine providers' perceptions and practices with regards to discussing health policy issues with families and to identify provider characteristics associated with having these discussions.Entities:
Keywords: Advocacy; Health policy; Political engagement; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32660527 PMCID: PMC7359268 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-020-02238-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Characteristics of Study Participants
| Characteristics | Number of participants (%) |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 37 (24%) |
| Female | 119 (76%) |
| Level of Training | |
| Resident Physician | 91 (58%) |
| Attending Physician | 55 (35%) |
| Nurse Practitioner | 11 (7%) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |
| White | 122 (78%) |
| Asian | 16 (10%) |
| Hispanic | 12 (8%) |
| African-American | 6 (4%) |
| Practice Setting | |
| Urban | 120 (76%) |
| Suburban | 37 (24%) |
| Political affiliation | |
| Democrat | 117 (75%) |
| Republican | 7 (4%) |
| Independent | 13 (8%) |
| Other/Prefer not to say | 20 (13%) |
| Voting history | |
| Last midterm election | 102 (65%) |
| Last presidential election | 151 (96%) |
| Both elections | 102 (65%) |
| Public participation | |
| Civic mindeda | 143 (91%) |
| Local community involvement | 111 (71%) |
| Local, state or federal political involvement | 100 (64%) |
| Organizational advocacy | 129 (82%) |
| Civically engagedb | 98 (62%) |
| Local community involvement | 50 (32%) |
| Local, state or federal political involvement | 67 (43%) |
| Organizational advocacy | 46 (29%) |
aParticipants were defined as civic minded if the sum of scores of community participation, political involvement, and collective advocacy (range from 3 to 12) were greater than 10
bParticipants were defined as civically engaged if they answered “yes” to taking part in any activity in community participation, political involvement, or collective advocacy in the past 3 years
Fig. 1Provider Beliefs Regarding Health Policy Discussions with Families. Difference between resident physicians and attending physicians or nurse practitioners is statistically significant (p = 0.001)
Importance and frequency of policy discussions: representative quotations and major themes elicited from focus group analysis
| Themes | Representative Quotations | |
|---|---|---|
| Perceived importance of policy discussions | Discussing relevant policy issues allows providers to inform and empower families | “Anything you can do to lend your voice, and particularly empower your patients to lend their voices to these issues is really important.” – Attending Physician A “If [patient] testimony is what’s necessary to change things “I think we should be involved in helping to empower families to make their voices heard… the kids themselves don’t have a voice, you know, it’s us as their providers, keeping in mind their best interest, and their parents.” – Resident Physician B |
| Current frequency of policy discussions | Clinicians more frequently discuss timely issues or issues that are directly related to provision of medical care | “I think it was useful around the time of the election … when we were also trying to register families [to vote], to use that as a current event that could help you talk about policy issues.” – Resident Physician C “If there’s something that’s immediately related to something [families] bring up or that you elicit in the interview, then I think that could be really an effective time to talk about this. “ – Resident Physician D |
| Clinicians frequently discuss social service programs with families, but do not often discuss the policies governing these programs | “When I talk to my families, I’m not talking broad policy things, I’m more assessing their situation - Are the kids in preschool or Head Start?… Do they have food insecurity?” – Attending Physician B “I probably feel a little more comfortable talking about … resources, and to make sure that they’re aware of what resources they’re eligible for and if not, how to get them.” – Resident Physician E | |
Fig. 2Providers’ Self-Reported Frequency of Health Policy Discussions with Families. No participants selected “always.” Difference between resident physicians and attending physicians or nurse practitioners is statistically significant (p < 0.001)
Multivariable Model Results Assessing Associations between Provider Characteristics and Frequency of Health Policy Discussions with Families.*
| OR (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| All providers | Residents | Attending Physicians and Nurse Practitioners | |
| Provider experience* | 8.22 (2.04–33.1)a | – | – |
| Gender | 0.61 (0.27–1.38) | 0.48 (0.19–1.24) | 2.36 (0.40–13.7) |
| Non-white race /ethnicity | 1.95 (0.67–5.65) | 1.32 (0.38–4.61) | 4.97 (0.39–63.5) |
| Age (y) | 1.02 (0.96–1.08) | 0.91 (0.71–1.15) | 1.06 (0.98–1.15) |
| Democatic party affiliation | 1.68 (0.72–3.95) | 2.47 (0.82–7.41) | 0.6 (0.12–2.95) |
| Urban practice setting | 3.85 (1.03–14.3)b | 0.93 (0.03–30.0) | 9.22 (1.72–49.2)d |
| Voting history** | 1.78 (0.82–3.84) | 2.79 (1.10–7.08)c | 0.29 (0.04–2.25) |
| Civic minded | 1.68 (0.45–6.29) | 1.54 (0.13–18.9) | 0.89 (0.14–5.6) |
| Civically engaged | 1.57 (0.77–3.21) | 1.23 (0.52–2.9) | 2.84 (0.66–12.1) |
All independent variables are dichotomized apart from age
*Defined as being an Attending Physician or Nurse Practitioner, as compared to a Resident. **Defined as a history of voting in both the most recent midterm and most resident presidential election.
ap = 0.003
bp = 0.044
cp = 0.031
dp = 0.009
Fig. 3a Barriers to Health Policy Discussions: Quantitative and Qualitative Results. Time constraints were the most commonly reported barrier to having health policy discussions in quantitative analysis and represented a salient barrier in qualitative analysis. b Facilitators of Health Policy Discussions: Quantitative and Qualitative Results. Standardized information about policy issues and workflow changes involving support staff were frequently discussed facilitators for having health policy discussions in quantitative analysis and were commonly discussed and emphasized in quantitative analysis