Injury Prevention Clinical Trial
Official title:
Behavior Change by Families in a Pediatric Emergency Department After Receiving Injury Prevention Information From a Safety Specialist Compared to a Computerized Kiosk
The purpose of this project is to compare the costs, ability to effectively screen and distribute relevant safety information, and assess products purchased and behavior changed by families after meeting with an injury prevention specialist compared to using a computerized emergency department kiosk. There will be a significantly greater reported practice of safety behaviors by families who visit a pediatric emergency department after using a computerized kiosk for injury screening and providing tailored recommendations than when the prevention information is provided by an injury prevention specialist.
In the past few years, physicians have been proposing that an emergency department visit may
act as a "teachable moment" and emergency medicine physicians should educate families about
injury prevention. With an epidemic number of injuries occurring, every health care provider
should play some role in combating the problem. However, emergency departments can be busy
and overcrowded, making it difficult for staff, in a cost efficient manner, to be able to
provide families with the appropriate injury prevention information. Kiosks have been shown
to be effective in a pediatric emergency department setting to determine the needs of
families and to educate them about safety practices. Thus, computerized kiosks may offer a
more cost effective alternative to educating families, compared to a staff member, about
injury prevention in the emergency medicine setting and they would have the ability to reach
more individuals during the non-high peak emergency department hours which are difficult to
staff. Also, a computerized kiosk may be more effective in eliciting a behavior change than
a staff person as families may be inclined to answer more freely when asked questions
anonymously, allowing them to receive more detailed safety information. In addition, the
kiosk provides direct recommendations about behavior changes based on parental responses in
a very short time period. Typically, families only hear about a few behavior change
recommendations when discussing with an injury prevention staff person in an emergency
department setting due to time constraints and family interest. With more directed injury
prevention information and detailed recommendations on behavior changes in a cost efficient
manner, kiosks may prove to be more effective in having families practice safer behaviors
after leaving the pediatric emergency department.
This is a comparative study performed in the emergency department of a level 1 pediatric
trauma center during the normal business hours of the Safety Resource Center. Families
entering the pediatric emergency department for care will be randomized on specific days of
the week to receive IP information from an IP specialist or from a computerized kiosk in the
waiting room. A twenty day block random numbers table will be used to determine which days
families entering the ED will utilize the computerized kiosk and which days they will be
screened by clinical research assistants (CRCs) and provided with safety instructions by an
IP specialist.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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