howard dubowitz, md, ms university of maryland school of medicine

41
The Prevention of Child Maltreatment: Two Strategies in the Child Healthcare System Haruv Institute Conference Jerusalem May 2010 Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS University of Maryland School of Medicine

Upload: buzz

Post on 23-Feb-2016

20 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The Prevention of Child Maltreatment: Two Strategies in the Child Healthcare System Haruv Institute Conference Jerusalem May 2010. Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS University of Maryland School of Medicine. The Field of Child Healthcare. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

The Prevention of Child Maltreatment:Two Strategies in the

Child Healthcare System

Haruv Institute Conference Jerusalem May 2010

Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS University of Maryland School of Medicine

Page 2: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

The Field of Child Healthcare

“As physicians who assume a responsibility for children’s physical, mental & emotional progress, pediatricians must be concerned with social and environmental influences which have a major impact on the health & well-being of children & their families”

Page 3: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

The Potential of Prevention

Effective prevention

should yield

many benefits, including

child abuse & neglect

Page 4: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

of child maltreatment

Prevention

Promotionof children’s health, development and safety

Page 6: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Pediatric Primary Care

• Routine checkups

• Periodic intervals

– 1 wk, 1, 2, 4, 6, 9, 12, 15 and 18 months

– 2, 3, 4, 5 years …………….

• Aims at prevention, early detection of problems

Page 7: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Pediatric Primary Care: An Opportunity for Preventing Child

Abuse & Neglect

• Well accepted, institutionalized• Goal of prevention• Concern with child, family• Special relationship with family• No stigma• Multiple visits (1st few yrs.)• An opportunity, responsibility

Page 8: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

The SEEK Model• Specially trained health professionals (HPs)

• Parent Screening Questionnaire (PSQ)

• Brief assessment of identified problems

• Initial management

• HP/social worker team

• SEEK resources – Parent Handouts

• Collaboration with community agencies

Page 9: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Training Primary Care Professionals

• Why problem is important

– prevalence, impact

• How to briefly assess

– risk & protective factors

• What to do

– initial management, referrals

Page 11: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Parent Screening Questionnaire (PSQ)

• brief • easy to read• answer yes/no• convenient, time to complete• voluntary

Page 12: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

PSQ

Page 13: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

PSQ Intro

• Empathic: “Being a parent is not always easy”

• Universal: “We’re asking everyone …”

• Provide context: “We want to help families have a safe environment for kids.”

• Builds on what’s accepted: injury prevention

Page 14: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Examples of PSQ Questions

• Intimate partner violence: In the past year, have you been afraid of a partner?

• Substance abuse: In the past year, have you felt the need to cut back on drinking or drug use?

• Depression: Lately, do you often feel down, depressed, or hopeless?

Page 15: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

When to screen?

• Regular checkups

• Not “sick visits”

Page 16: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Study Hypothesis

The SEEK model of primary care will reduce child maltreatment rate, measured by:

• Parent self-report• Medical chart data• Child protective services (CPS) reports

Page 17: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

SEEK Study Design

Subset of mothers recruited

Model Care (Intervention)Trained pediatricians, Parent Screening Questionnaire,

+ social worker. All patients receive Model Care

InitialSurve

y

6 Mo. Surve

y

Medical Chart &

CPS Record Review

Standard Care (Control)All patients receive standard pediatric primary care

Randomly assign practices

12 Mo. Surve

y

Page 18: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Participants

• Mothers of children < 6 years

• English speaking

• Child not in foster care

• Bringing child for a checkup

Page 19: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

SEEK Samples

Parent Demographic Characteristics SEEK I SEEK II

N 558 1119

Demographics low income, urban middle class, suburban

Race mostly African American mostly white

Mean age 25 years 33 years

Education 66% high school or more 90% college or more

Employed 37 % 55 %

Marital status - 88 % Married

Family income - 56% > $75,000

Page 20: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

SEEK Samples

Child Demographic Characteristics

SEEK I SEEK IIN 558 1119

Mean age 0.5 years 1.6 years

Gender 52% male 52% male

Race 92% African American

81% white

Insurance 93 % Medicaid 91% private

Page 21: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Parental Self-Report

SEEK 1 SEEK II*

PsychologicalAggressionPhysical Assault - minorPhysical Assault - severe

* Initially and at 12 months

Page 22: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Medical Neglect: Non-compliance†

based on chart review (SEEK I)

0123456789

10

Before After*

%

InterventionControl

* P = 0.05† MD documented “non-compliance”

Page 23: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Medical Neglect: Delayed Immunizations†

based on chart review (SEEK I)

0123456789

10

Before After*

%

InterventionControl

† MD documented this * P = 0.002

Page 24: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Child Protective Services Reports for Abuse or Neglect (SEEK I)

0

5

10

15

20

25

Before After*

%

InterventionControl

* P = 0.03

Page 25: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

SEEK - Strengths

• Positive findings in 2 RCTs

• Moderate size samples– High and low risk

• Fits well with an existing system of pediatric primary care

• Little additional time required

Page 26: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

SEEK - Limitations

• Low prevalence of risk factors in low risk sample

• Cost of social worker

Page 27: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

In Sum• Pediatric primary care offers a good opportunity

to address major psychosocial issues facing many children & families

• SEEK offers a practical model for improving pediatric primary care

– Sustained improvement in health professional practice

– PSQ a useful screening tool

• Evidence that SEEK can prevent maltreatmentDubowitz et al, Pediatrics, 2009;123:858

Page 28: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Programs for parents of newborns to prevent abusive head trauma

(AHT)

Page 29: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Known cases – tip of the iceberg

Page 30: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

AHT IncidenceAHT Incidence

17

2600

0

1000

2000

3000

Rat

e pe

r 100

,000

Keenan* Theodore**

• Shaking of children < 2 yrs

• Keenan: ICU admissions

• Theodore: parent report

*Keenan et al. JAMA 2003;290:621-6 **Theodore et al. Pediatrics 2005;115:e331-7

Page 31: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

The Dias ModelThe Dias Model• Components

– Infant crying and AHT info– Video: coping with crying– Commitment statement

• Results – 47% reduction in AHT cases – 42 22 cases per 100,000 – No such decrease in neighboring state

Page 32: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Limitations of Dias studyLimitations of Dias study

• Many parents not exposed

• Decrease due to other factors?

• Generalizable?

• Reproducible?

Page 33: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

The Period of The Period of PURPLE CryingPURPLE Crying

ModelModel

Peak patternUnexpected onsetResistance to soothingPain-like grimaceLong crying boutsEvening clustering

Page 34: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine
Page 35: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

PURPLE EvaluationPURPLE Evaluation• Randomized controlled trials

– PURPLE booklet & CD

• Recruitment prenatally and post-partum • Diary – 24 hr ruler

– Infant states (eg, crying)– Parent behavior (eg, holding baby)– Key events: pick up, put down & walk away

• Phone interview at 2 months

Page 36: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

PURPLE EvaluationPURPLE Evaluation

Knowledge PURPLE Control

Crying 69% 63%

Shaking 85% 83%

Page 37: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

PURPLE EvaluationPURPLE Evaluation• Behavioral response to crying

– PURPLE a little better than control– Not statistically significant

• Sharing information– PURPLE more Don’t Shake info– PURPLE more walk away info– PURPLE more cry info - Vancouver study

• More infant contact during distress – WA study

Page 38: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

PURPLE Strengths

• Large evaluations

• Randomized trials

• Fidelity to model

Page 39: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

PURPLE LimitationsPURPLE Limitations• Evaluation limited to mothers

• Small differences in knowledge, behavior - self report

• No SBS or AHT outcomes

Page 40: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Can/should these programs be applied in

Israel?

Page 41: Howard Dubowitz, MD, MS      University of Maryland School of Medicine

Toda [email protected]