Medical Homes for At-Risk Children: Parental Reports of Clinician-Parent Relationships, Anticipatory Guidance, and Behavior Changes
- 1 January 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Pediatrics
- Vol. 115 (1), 48-56
- https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2004-1193
Abstract
Background. Family-centeredness, compassion, and trust are 3 attributes of the clinician-parent relationship in the medical home. Among adults, these attributes are associated with patients9 adherence to clinicians9 advice. Objectives. The objectives were (1) to measure medical home attributes related to the clinician-parent relationship, (2) to measure provision of anticipatory guidance regarding injury and illness prevention, (3) to relate anticipatory guidance to parental behavior changes, and (4) to relate medical home attributes to anticipatory guidance and parental behavior changes. Methods. A cross-sectional study of data collected among at-risk families when children were 1 year of age, in a randomized, controlled trial of a home-visiting program to prevent child abuse and neglect, was performed. Modified subscales of the Primary Care Assessment Survey were used to measure parental ratings of clinicians9 family-centeredness, compassion, and trust. Parental reports of provision of anticipatory guidance regarding injury and illness prevention topics (smoke alarms, infant walkers, car seats, hot water temperature, stair guards, sunscreen, firearm safety, and bottle propping) and behavior changes were recorded. Results. Of the 564 mothers interviewed when their children were 1 year of age, 402 (71%) had a primary care provider and had complete data for anticipatory guidance items. By definition, poverty, partner violence, poor maternal mental health, and maternal substance abuse were common in the study sample. Maternal ratings of clinicians9 family-centeredness, compassion, and trust were fairly high but ranged widely and varied among population subgroups. Families reported anticipatory guidance for a mean of 4.6 ± 2.2 topics relevant for discussion. Each medical home attribute was positively associated with parental reports of completeness of anticipatory guidance, ie, family-centeredness (β = .026, SE = .004), compassion (β = .019, SE = .005), and trust (β = .016, SE = .005). Parents9 perceptions of behavior changes were positively associated with trust (β = .018, SE = .006). Analyses were adjusted for potential confounding by randomized, controlled trial group assignment, receipt of ≥5 well-child visits, and baseline attributes. Conclusions. Among at-risk families, we found an association between parental ratings of the medical home and parental reports of the completeness of anticipatory guidance regarding selected injury and illness prevention topics. Parents9 trust of the clinician was associated with parent-reported behavior changes for discussed topics.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Randomized trial of a statewide home visiting program to prevent child abuse: impact in reducing parental risk factorsChild Abuse & Neglect, 2004
- Randomized trial of a statewide home visiting program: impact in preventing child abuse and neglectChild Abuse & Neglect, 2004
- Accuracy of Parental Reporting of ImmunizationClinical Pediatrics, 2004
- Validity of self reported home safety practicesInjury Prevention, 2003
- The Medical HomePublished by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) ,2002
- Parental recall of birth weight: how accurate is it?Archives of Disease in Childhood, 2000
- The Primary Care Assessment SurveyMedical Care, 1998
- Expectations, Goals, and Perceived Effectiveness of Child Health Supervision: A Study of Mothers in a Pediatric PracticeClinical Pediatrics, 1996
- 'What I said' versus 'what you heard': a comparison of physicians' and parents' reporting of anticipatory guidance on child safety issues.Injury Prevention, 1995
- Reliability of parental recall of developmental milestonesPediatric Neurology, 1994