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Preventing Pediatric Injuries: From Education to Community Interventions

Preventing Pediatric Injuries: From Education to Community Interventions. Mike Gittelman, MD Associate Professor Division of Emergency Medicine Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. Objectives. Recognize the burden of childhood injuries Identify the 4 E’s in preventing injuries

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Preventing Pediatric Injuries: From Education to Community Interventions

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  1. Preventing Pediatric Injuries: From Education to Community Interventions Mike Gittelman, MD Associate Professor Division of Emergency Medicine Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

  2. Objectives • Recognize the burden of childhood injuries • Identify the 4 E’s in preventing injuries • Discuss the prevention efforts I have been a part of locally, regionally, and nationally

  3. "I didn't know there was a problem" Past Top Stories "Why hasn't anyone ever told us" • Teen wounds six in High School shooting • 3 month old improperly restrained … loses life • House blaze fatally injures four children • Study finds playgrounds safer, but not enough "3 out of 4 improperly use the seats" "If we only knew that we shouldn't..."

  4. Why Injury Prevention? • Injuries • Are the # 1 killer of children > 1 year of age • Cause more deaths than all other diseases combined • Almost all injuries are preventable • Prevention • Is essential • Saves health care dollars • Oklahoma City – Smoke alarm giveaway • 10,000 smoke alarms - $15 million net savings www.cdc.gov/pub/ncipc

  5. Childhood Injuries - Deaths % total mortality Source: National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, 2008

  6. Average Day in U.S. • > 80,000 injuries resulting in hospitalizations and ED visits; >28,000 in kids 0-19 y.o. • > 400 deaths due to injuries; > 50 in kids 0-19 y.o. Source: National Center for Injury Prevention and control, 2008

  7. Injury Deaths by Cause – US, 1-19 Years of Age, 2008 Source: National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, 2008

  8. Intervention to Prevent Injuries4 E’s • Education • Media campaigns, school programs • Enforcement/Legislation • Child safety laws, speed limit enforcement • Engineering/Technology • Airbags, bike helmets, child safety seats • Environmental Modification • Bike lanes, safety gaits, speed bumps

  9. Education Injury Prevention & Advocacy: A Model Course for Pediatric Resident Education

  10. Why Should Pediatricians Be Advocates? • Children have little political voice • Primarily care for a poor, underserved population • Pediatricians have a knowledge-base of “what’s out there” • Pediatricians are well respected and accepted in a community • Pediatricians are expected to educate families about Anticipatory Guidance regularly

  11. Pediatricians Lack IP/Advocacy Training • Residents receive little education about injury prevention • Residency directors report disease management taught more than injury prevention • Zavoski, Arch Peds Adol Med 1990 • Chief Residents Survey - Injury prevention and Advocacy – only 2-3 informal lectures throughout residency • Need to educate residents in order to teach families • Chief residents only counsel on what they were once taught, barrier = lack of training – Wright, Arch Peds Adol Med 1997 • < 50% of residents discussed injury prevention on audiotaped encounters - Gielen, Arch Peds Adol Med 1997 • <40% of parents received any injury counseling at PMD visit - Miller, Pediatrics 1995

  12. Motivations for Course • Need for a “structured educational experience to prepare a resident to be a community advocate” • 1996 Residency Review Committee for Pediatrics • Injury prevention should be an “integral educational experience for pediatric residents” • 1991 AAP Policy Statement • Injuries are #1 cause of death in children > 1 year • Injuries cause more death than all diseases combined • Anecdotal experiences during residency training

  13. Idea • Formally educate pediatric residents about injury prevention to provide them with a foundation to become community advocates

  14. Curriculum • Morning didactic lectures • Afternoon field experiences • Complement AM lectures • Hospital Commitment • 1996 (First year) – elective for all residents • 1997-2010 • Two-week mandatory rotation for all pediatric interns • Offered six times per year • No call requirement

  15. Injury Prevention Car safety seats Bicycle Safety Home safety Toy Safety Drowning Firearms Suicide Playground safety Pedestrian Safety Domestic Violence Poisonings Advocacy What is an advocate? How to give a lecture Insurance 101 Special health needs Patient rights To health care (meds) To special ed evals Reporting abuse Legislative initiatives Community resources Dental and nutrition health Curriculum - Topics

  16. IP at childbirth education classes Bike helmet at elementary schools Smoking Cessation Program Local fire station – fire prevention Sports Medicine Child Protective Services Drug and Poison Center Rape Crisis and Abuse Center International Adoption Toys R Us – Toy Safety Legal aid/Ohio Medicaid Child protective services home visits Car seat installations Field Experiences

  17. Requirements • Attendance • Parent education pamphlet • Review injury literature • Letter to state official • Participate in field experiences • Evaluations • Propose a 3-year advocacy project

  18. Curriculum - New Developments • Bi-annual updates (eg. change speakers, lectures, and experiences) based on evaluations • Adult learning model • Topic reviews • Debates • Evaluation tools • Speakers evaluate residents after each talk

  19. After 1 Year Evaluation of Knowledge • CCHMC Residents Vs. Two Regional Comparable Pediatric Residency Programs • 50 question survey • 73 residents (29 intervention, 38 control) • No difference age, experience, schooling • Injury knowledge obtained Pre-Test Scores (Mean) Post-Test Scores (Mean) % Increase CHMC Residents 55.1% 69.2% 14.1% Controls 56.3% 59.5% 3.2% Mean Difference 10.98 (95% CI: 6.5, 15.5), P-value < 0.001

  20. After 3 Years Evaluation of Knowledge Retention • Repeated survey given after year one • 38 residents (16 intervention & 22 controls) • Injury knowledge obtained Orientation (Mean) End 3rd yr (Mean) % Increase CCHMC Residents 56.6% 68.5% 11.9% Controls 56% 61.5% 5.5% Mean Difference 6.4% (95% CI: 1.2, 11.8), P-value < .05

  21. Feedback from Residents • Enjoyed • Learning resources in community • Filling in gaps of needed information • Hands-on learning experience • Increased comfort • Providing anticipatory guidance • Documenting injuries in ED and clinic • Community speaking

  22. Future Directions • Further evaluations of the course • Improve ways to provide resident feedback • Impact • More anticipatory guidance due to course • Continued anticipatory guidance after residency • More involved in advocacy efforts • More involved in research within injury field • National influence • AAP standardized curriculum

  23. Legislation/Enforcement • Locally • Speed bumps strategically placed • Local Ordinances Bicycle Helmets • Cincinnati, Green Township, Madeira • State • Ohio booster seat legislation • Ohio bicycle helmet legislation

  24. Product Modification/Dispersement Emergency Department Safety Store

  25. Idea Behind Safety Store • Proven safety products • Car safety seats – 70% reduction in death from MVC • Booster seats – 59% safer in MVC • Bike helmets – Reduce head injury by 85% • Smoke alarms – Decrease deaths by 50% • Not accessible at reasonable prices locally • Make families leaving our ED safer • Modeled after Johns Hopkins Injury Center • ? ED as a teachable moment

  26. The Emergency Department as a “Teachable Moment” • Johnston, et al, Pediatrics 2002 • 12-20 year olds treated in the ED for an injury • Educated about IP vs. Routine Care • Increased bike helmet and seat belt usage • Posner, et al, Pediatrics 2004 • Children < 5 years with an unintentional injury • Received home safety education and free product vs. injury specific ED instructions • Increase in home safety practices after ED intervention

  27. Two Studies Conducted in CCHMC ED • Gittelman, et al, AEM 2006 • 4-7 year olds presenting to the ED for any complaint • No family educated about booster seats used one at one month follow-up • 98% used booster seat if educated and given a seat • Gittelman, et al, PEC 2008 • Parental survey of ED families • 93% felt the ED should provide safety information • 83% were willing to wait longer in the ED • 73% wished for product to be made available to them in the ED setting

  28. Store Details Grand Opening 6/20/05 • Housed in the ED waiting room • Collaborative effort • Items sold at cost • Car safety seats, Booster seats • Bike helmets, Wrist guards • Smoke/CO detectors • Window guards • Sales for • ED customers • Hospital staff • Community • Evaluation • Who is purchasing • Information requested • Follow-up calls of usage • Sustainability

  29. Monthly Sales, 6/1/2005—2/1/2009 • Up to $1100 sales monthly, 1500 educated monthly • Operational costs high – Personnel • Next steps • Kiosk • Other prevention items for sale

  30. Customer Satisfaction • 98.1 % of families ranked the service as 9 or 10 out of 10 • Most families who made a purchase (75%) heard of the store while at CCHMC • 70% were in the ED with a patient or family

  31. 3 week Follow-Up • 383/ 786 (49%) customers who made a purchase were reached for follow-up • 97% using the purchased product 100% of time • 107 (28%) made a behavior change in their home different from the product purchased • 97% felt the prices were affordable • 95% believed the store hours were reasonable and it was located in the appropriate place

  32. Environmental Modifications Community Involvement in Preventing Injuries

  33. Community / Service Injury Free Coalition for Kids® (IFCK) • Started in Harlem, NY • Funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation • Decrease injuries by • Education • Altering environments • Increasing supervised after school activities • Community-hospital partnerships

  34. Effectiveness of IFCK Programs Nationally • Harlem, NY-55% reduction in injuries • Similar injury reductions at other, more-established sites • Children’s Memorial, Chicago, IL • St. Louis Children’s Hospital • Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Pedestrian Hospital Admissions Window Falls Firearms/Assaults Traffic Harlem Hospital Injury Reductions by Mechanism

  35. IFCK of Cincinnati • Began in 2000 • Public health approach • Problem • At-risk • Community needs • Intervention / Evaluation • Based on • Data • Hamilton County Health District • CCHMC Trauma Registry • Community concerns • Social and structural changes • Evaluations are essential

  36. Hamilton County Injuries Avondale – Target Community • Population* • 20,000 residents • 5000 < 18 years old • 4th highest injury rate in Cincinnati • 1812.5 injuries / 100,000 children / year • Close proximity to hospital • Getting started • 60% injuries 4pm-midnight • Structural modifications - Playground building *U.S. Census Bureau, 2000

  37. Gain Community Buy-In • Gain trust of the community • Meetings, meetings, meetings • Listen to concerns • Focus groups to assess needs • Provide tangible results • Do what you say you are going to do • Don’t promise what you cannot deliver • Provide members with expertise and resources • Empower communities to thrive

  38. Playgrounds – Before and After 2002 2001 2003 2004 2005

  39. Evaluation – Playground Use Significantly more children on new playgrounds compared to old (p<0.001)

  40. Additional Structural Changes • Football Field • Speed bumps • Assisted with other community developmental projects

  41. Social Changes • After school programs – ODE grant for 3 Avondale Elementary Schools • Improve grades • Educational/cultural/healthy programs • Basketball program – police-community interaction • 33% reduction in juvenile arrests • Community coalitions/partnerships • Safety fairs and educational programs

  42. Reduction of Avondale Injuries Since the Beginning of IFC - Cincinnati -42% -25.7% -9.8% -9.8% -38.6%

  43. IFCK – 2005 - 2010 • Avondale • Sustain current programming and develop new structural and changes • Two new playgrounds built this summer • Home safety initiative in daycares – address new ages • Completed a Diabetes and Obesity After School Program • Continue safety fairs and outreach • Need to assess sustainability of efforts • Price Hill – Second intervention community • Playgrounds – built 1 per year, total of 6 to date • Home safety initiative – approximately 500 homes served • Teen basketball program – 130 youth engaged

  44. Conclusions • Injuries are the number cause of morbidity and mortality to children 1-19 years old • Injuries are 100% preventable • Everyone should play their part to prevent them • Small interventions effecting the 4 E’s can help to reduce the injury burden • All it takes is a passion and a little work

  45. “If a disease were killing our children in the same proportions as injury, we would be outraged and demand this killer be stopped” C. Everett Koop, M.D. Former Surgeon General of the United States

  46. Questions?

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