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    Date Issued2020 (2)Author
    Gorzkowski, Julie (2)
    Klein, Jonathan D. (2)Pbert, Lori (2)Boykan, Rachel (1)Davis, James (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationUMass Worcester Prevention Research Center (2)Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences (1)Division of Preventive and Behavioral Medicine, Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordHealth Services Administration (2)Pediatrics (2)Preventive Medicine (2)Substance Abuse and Addiction (2)Behavioral Medicine (1)View MoreJournalAmerican journal of preventive medicine (1)Pediatrics (1)

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    Pediatric Resident Training in Tobacco Control and the Electronic Health Record

    Boykan, Rachel; Gorzkowski, Julie; Wellman, Robert J.; Jenssen, Brian P.; Klein, Jonathan D.; Krugman, Jessica; Pbert, Lori; Salloum, Ramzi G. (2020-10-29)
    Given the dangers posed by tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure, pediatricians should address tobacco use and exposure with patients and parents at every opportunity, but this is not consistently done in practice. One reason may be that many medical residents do not receive education on how to address tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure with patients and their parents. In a 2012 survey of U.S. pediatric program directors, 65% of programs reported covering tobacco control in their curricula, but most training programs focused on tobacco's health effects and not intervention strategies for clinical practice. Since that survey, electronic health records have been implemented broadly nationwide and utilized to address tobacco smoke exposure. Investigators surveyed U.S. program directors in 2018 and residents in 2019 to explore the ways in which the residents learn about tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure, components and use of the electronic record specific to tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure, and perceived resident effectiveness in this area. All the program directors and 85% of the residents valued training, but 21% of the residents reported receiving none. Moreover, a minority of the residents assessed themselves as effective at counseling parents (19%) or adolescents (23%), and their perceived effectiveness was related to small group learning and active learning workshops, modalities that were infrequently implemented in training. Respondents also reported infrequent use of electronic health record prompts regarding tobacco and the absence of prompts about critical issues (e.g., addressing tobacco smoke exposure in vehicles or other settings or offering treatment or referrals to parents who smoke). This paper provides recommendations about augmenting pediatric resident training in simple ways.
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    Delivery and Impact of a Motivational Intervention for Smoking Cessation: A PROS Study

    Klein, Jonathan D.; Gorzkowski, Julie; Resnick, Elissa A.; Harris, Donna; Kaseeska, Kristen; Pbert, Lori; Prokorov, Alex; Wang, Tianxiu; Davis, James; Gotlieb, Edward; et al. (2020-10-01)
    OBJECTIVES: We tested a Public Health Service 5As-based clinician-delivered smoking cessation counseling intervention with adolescent smokers in pediatric primary care practice. METHODS: We enrolled clinicians from 120 practices and recruited youth (age > /=14) from the American Academy of Pediatrics Pediatric Research in Office Settings practice-based research network. Practices were randomly assigned to training in smoking cessation (intervention) or social media counseling (attentional control). Youth recruited during clinical visits completed confidential screening forms. All self-reported smokers and a random sample of nonsmokers were offered enrollment and interviewed by phone at 4 to 6 weeks, 6 months, and 12 months after visits. Measures included adolescents' report of clinicians' delivery of screening and counseling, current tobacco use, and cessation behaviors and intentions. Analysis assessed receipt of screening and counseling, predictors of receiving 5As counseling, and effects of interventions on smoking behaviors and cessation at 6 and 12 months. RESULTS: Clinicians trained in the 5As intervention delivered more screening (beta = 1.0605, P < .0001) and counseling (beta = 0.4354, P < .0001). In both arms, clinicians more often screened smokers than nonsmokers. At 6 months, study arm was not significantly associated with successful cessation; however, smokers in the 5As group were more likely to have quit at 12 months. Addicted smokers more often were counseled, regardless of study arm, but were less likely to successfully quit smoking. CONCLUSIONS: Adolescent smokers whose clinicians were trained in 5As were more likely to receive smoking screening and counseling than controls, but the ability of this intervention to help adolescents quit smoking was limited.
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