Abstract

BackgroundA child’s home and family environment plays a vital role in neuro-cognitive and emotional development. Assessment of a child’s home environment and social circumstances is an crucial part of holistic Paediatric assessment.AimsOur aim is to achieve full compliance with comprehensive documentation of biopsychosocial history, for all children medically admitted to the children’s inpatient unit in University Hospital Limerick.MethodsWe performed a retrospective chart review to audit documentation within our department. This was followed by teaching interventions and a survey on knowledge, attitudes and behaviour of paediatric non-consultant hospital doctors (NCHDs) towards the social history. We performed two subsequent re-audits to assess response to our interventions, and provided educational sessions to seek improvement in quality of care.ResultsResults showed a significant improvement in quality of documentation following interventions, demonstrated by a net increase of 53% in levels of documentation of some social history on first re-audit. Though this was not maintained at an optimum level throughout the course of the year with compliance reduced from 95% to 82.5% on second re-audit, there was nonetheless a sustained improvement from our baseline. Our qualitative survey suggested further initiatives and educational tools that may be helpful in supporting the ongoing optimisation of the quality of documentation of social history in our paediatric department.ConclusionWe hope this quality improvement initiative will ultimately lead to sustained improvements in the quality of patient-centred care, and early identification and intervention for children at risk in our community.

Highlights

  • A child’s home and family environment plays a vital role in neuro-cognitive and emotional development

  • Our aim is to achieve 100% compliance with comprehensive documentation of biopsychosocial history of all children on admission to the children’s inpatient unit in Limerick University Hospital

  • We provided one further interactive ‘refresher’ teaching session to medical staff within our paediatric unit following this re-audit and presentation of results

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Summary

Introduction

A child’s home and family environment plays a vital role in neuro-cognitive and emotional development. Research has shown that a child’s home and family environment plays a vital role in neuro-cognitive and emotional development [1]. This review made six crucial policy objectives, including giving every child the best start in life, enabling all children and adolescents to achieve their potential and maximising control over their lives [2]. To do so, they recommend ensuring high quality maternity care and early childhood education, improving resilience amongst children, obtaining equality in resources that optimise emotional and physical development and improving access to education and learning of skills that will improve quality of life [3]. Heightened awareness of social inequity has been reflected in a review by Paediatric Research discussing the impact of SDH on various health conditions and outcomes [5]

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