Electronic Screening for Adolescent Risk Behaviors in the Emergency Department: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Author:

Thomas-Smith Siobhan1,Klein Eileen1,Strelitz Bonnie2,Jensen Jennifer2,Parker Elizabeth2,Richardson Laura3,McCarty Carolyn3,Shafii Taraneh3

Affiliation:

1. University of Washington, Seattle Children’s Hospital, Department of Pediatrics, Division of Emergency Medicine, Seattle, Washington

2. Center for Clinical and Translational Research, Seattle Children’s Research Institute, Seattle, Washington

3. University of Washington School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Division of Adolescent Medicine, Seattle, Washington

Abstract

Introduction: In this study we aimed to assess the impact of an electronic health assessment with individualized feedback for risk behaviors in adolescents seeking care in a pediatric emergency department (ED). Methods: We conducted a randomized control trial using a tablet-based screening program with a study population of adolescents in a busy pediatric ED. The intervention group received the screening program with individualized feedback. The control group received the screening program without feedback. All participants received one-day and three-month follow-up surveys to assess behaviors and attitudes toward health behaviors. Results: A total of 296 subjects were enrolled and randomized. There was no difference in changes in risky behaviors between the control and experimental groups. A higher proportion of participants in the intervention groups reported that the screener changed the way they thought about their health at one-day follow-up (27.0%, 36/133) compared to the control group (15.5%, 20/129, P = .02). Conclusion: This study successfully tested a multivariable electronic health screener in a real-world setting of a busy pediatric ED. The tool did not significantly change risky health behaviors in the adolescent population screened. However, our finding that the intervention changed adolescents’ perceptions of their health opens a door to the continued development of electronic interventions to screen for and target risk behaviors in adolescents in the ED setting.

Publisher

Western Journal of Emergency Medicine

Subject

General Medicine,Emergency Medicine

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