Abstract

BackgroundPediatric emergency department (PED) and urgent care (UC) professionals can play a key role in delivering evidence-based guidelines to address parental tobacco use and child tobacco smoke exposure (TSE). Understanding PED/UC professionals’ perceptions regarding these guidelines is the first step in developing and implementing a TSE screening and counseling intervention in these settings. This study aimed to use the theoretical domains framework (TDF) to identify current screening and counseling behaviors of PED/UC professionals related to parental tobacco use and child TSE, and determine barriers and enablers that influence these behaviors.MethodsSemi-structured, focused interviews were conducted with 29 actively practicing PED/UC clinical staff who worked at one large, Midwestern children’s hospital. The interview guide was informed by the TDF and included open-ended questions. Content analysis of interview transcripts was guided by the TDF. Nurses, physicians, and healthcare administrators were assessed overall and by group membership to ensure each group was represented based on their varying PED/UC roles.ResultsFifty-one percent were nurses, 38% were physicians, and 11% were healthcare administrators. Most PED/UC professionals did not currently follow the guidelines, but perceived addressing parental tobacco use as part of their role. All 14 TDF domains were identified by nurses, physicians, and administrators in relation to counseling for parental tobacco use and child TSE. Domains with the most sub-themes were (1) knowledge: lack of knowledge about tobacco counseling, including implementing counseling, cessation resources/referrals, and thirdhand smoke; (2) beliefs about capabilities: not comfortable counseling parents, easier to discuss with parents who are receptive and to ask and advise when patients have a TSE-related complaint, and more likely to discuss if there were resources/referrals; and (3) environmental context and resources: barriers include lack of time, training, and resources and referral information to give to parents, and an enabler is using TSE-related complaints as a context to offer counseling.ConclusionsStudy findings provide a strong foundation for developing and implementing clinical practice guidelines regarding parental tobacco use and child TSE in the PED/UC setting. Future intervention development will address all TDF domains and test the implementation of the intervention in the PED/UC setting.

Highlights

  • Pediatric emergency department (PED) and urgent care (UC) professionals can play a key role in deliv‐ ering evidence-based guidelines to address parental tobacco use and child tobacco smoke exposure (TSE)

  • The present study aimed to identify current screening and counseling behaviors of PED/UC nurses, physicians, and healthcare administrators related to parental tobacco use and child TSE and determine barriers and enablers that influence current behavior of delivering evidence-based tobacco counseling

  • PED/UC professionals suggested they need the following enablers: (1) tobacco cessation resources and referral information to give to parents, (2) training and aids to facilitate discussion of the sensitive topic of tobacco use with parents, and (3) the child’s reason of visit to be potentially related to TSE to provide an opportunity and context to offer tobacco counseling to parents during the visit

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Tobacco use disorders impose an inordinately large public health burden on emergency departments (EDs) [1] Parents who bring their children to the pediatric ED (PED) have high cigarette smoking rates ranging from 28% up to 48% [2, 3] compared with the US general adult population (14%) [4]. This discrepancy may be due to PEDs commonly caring for those of lower socioeconomic status (e.g., public insurance) [5], which is inversely related to adult smoking [4] and child tobacco smoke exposure (TSE) [6]. Orally ingested, and/or dermally transferred from the residual tobacco smoke toxicants that are left behind in the environment after tobacco smoking has been ceased

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call