Electronic Screening for Adolescent Risk Behaviors in the Emergency Department: A Randomized Controlled Trial

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Abstract

Introduction: In this study we aimed to assess the impact of an electronic health assessment with individualized feedback for risk behaviors in adolescents seeking care in a pediatric emergency department (ED). Methods: We conducted a randomized control trial using a tablet-based screening program with a study population of adolescents in a busy pediatric ED. The intervention group received the screening program with individualized feedback. The control group received the screening program without feedback. All participants received one-day and three-month follow-up surveys to assess behaviors and attitudes toward health behaviors. Results: A total of 296 subjects were enrolled and randomized. There was no difference in changes in risky behaviors between the control and experimental groups. A higher proportion of participants in the intervention groups reported that the screener changed the way they thought about their health at one-day follow-up (27.0%, 36/133) compared to the control group (15.5%, 20/129, P = .02). Conclusion: This study successfully tested a multivariable electronic health screener in a real-world setting of a busy pediatric ED. The tool did not significantly change risky health behaviors in the adolescent population screened. However, our finding that the intervention changed adolescents' perceptions of their health opens a door to the continued development of electronic interventions to screen for and target risk behaviors in adolescents in the ED setting.

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APA

Thomas-Smith, S., Klein, E. J., Strelitz, B., Jensen, J., Parker, E., Richardson, L., … Shafii, T. (2022). Electronic Screening for Adolescent Risk Behaviors in the Emergency Department: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Western Journal of Emergency Medicine, 23(6), 931–938. https://doi.org/10.5811/westjem.2022.7.55755

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