Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine adolescent healthcare clinicians’ self-reported screening practices as well as their knowledge, attitudes, comfort level and challenges with screening and counselling adolescents and young adults (AYA) for cigarette, e-cigarette, alcohol, marijuana, hookah and blunt use.DesignA 2016 cross-sectional survey.SettingAcademic departments and community-based internal medicine, family medicine and paediatrics practices.ParticipantsAdolescent healthcare clinicians (N=771) from 12 US medical schools and respondents to national surveys. Of the participants, 36% indicated male, 64% female, mean age was 44 years (SD=12.3); 12.3% of participants identified as Asian, 73.7% as white, 4.8% as black, 4.2% as Hispanic and 3.8% as other.Primary and secondary outcome measuresSurvey items queried clinicians about knowledge, attitudes, comfort level, self-efficacy and challenges with screening and counselling AYA patients about marijuana, blunts, cigarettes, e-cigarettes, hookah and alcohol.ResultsParticipants were asked what percentage of their 10–17 years old patients they screened for substance use. The median number of physicians reported screening 100% of their patients for cigarette (1st, 3rd quartiles; 80, 100) and alcohol use (75, 100) and 99.5% for marijuana use (50,100); for e-cigarettes, participants reported screening half of their patients and 0.0% (0, 50), (0, 75)) reported screening for hookah and blunts, respectively. On average (median), clinicians estimated that 15.0% of all 10–17 years old patients smoked cigarettes, 10.0% used e-cigarettes, 20.0% used marijuana, 25.0% drank alcohol and 5.0% used hookah or blunts, respectively; yet they estimated lower than national rates of use of each product for their own patients. Clinicians reported greater comfort discussing cigarettes and alcohol with patients and less comfort discussing e-cigarettes, hookah, marijuana and blunts.ConclusionsThis study identified low rates of screening and counselling AYA patients for use of e-cigarettes, hookahs and blunts by adolescent healthcare clinicians and points to potential missed opportunities to improve prevention efforts.
Funder
Richmond Center of Excellence
American Academy of Pediatrics
Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the US Department of Health and Human Services
Flight Attendant Medical Research Institute
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
FAMRI
AAP
Reference40 articles.
1. Health Policy Institute . Substance abuse: facing the costs. Georgetown University. Available: https://hpi.georgetown.edu/abuse/# [Accessed 19 Jun 2021].
2. Association of Electronic Cigarette Use With Initiation of Combustible Tobacco Product Smoking in Early Adolescence
3. American Lung Association . Tobacco trends brief. Available: https://www.lung.org/research/trends-in-lung-disease/tobacco-trends-brief/overall-tobacco-trends [Accessed 03 Sep 2020].
4. Trends and Correlates of Hookah Use Among High School Students in North Carolina
5. Underage drinking. Available: https://www.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/brochures-and-fact-sheets/underage-drinking