Addressing tobacco screening and treatment among racially and ethnically minoritized parents in pediatric clinics: barriers and facilitators.

IF 3 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
April K Wilhelm, Karen Bauer, Michele L Allen, Steven S Fu, Junia N de Brito, Rebekah J Pratt
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Household secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure remains a significant health issue for racially and ethnically minoritized children in the United States. Delivering parental tobacco treatment during pediatric primary care visits can reduce children's SHS exposure. This study examined current tobacco screening practices and health system stakeholder perceptions of facilitators and barriers to addressing tobacco use during pediatric visits among racially and ethnically minoritized parents.

Methods: We conducted 25 semi-structured interviews with clinicians, staff, and health system leaders from 5 pediatric primary care clinics in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota. The study was informed by the Health Equity Implementation Framework. Interviews were analyzed using both directed content and thematic analysis.

Results: Participants identified multilevel facilitators and barriers to addressing parental tobacco use in minoritized families. Within the clinical encounter, barriers included linguistic and cultural barriers, health system navigational challenges, medical mistrust, low levels of clinician and staff knowledge, skills, and confidence, time constraints, and lack of alignment with external metrics. Facilitators centered on leveraging interpreters' cultural knowledge and the presence of culturally-congruent clinicians and staff to reduce medical mistrust and stigma, developing linguistically and culturally relevant resources, and integrating prompts and resources into the electronic health record. Participants described how lessons from previous system change mechanisms would facilitate this work.

Conclusions: Addressing health system, training and resources, and linguistic and cultural barriers among clinicians and staff is essential to strengthen their capacity to address household SHS exposure among racially and ethnically minoritized populations as a component of pediatric preventive care.

Implications: Clinicians and health system staff perceive unique barriers to identifying and addressing parental tobacco use among racially and ethnically minoritized parents during pediatric primary care visits. Solutions to expand tobacco treatment access to minoritized parents in pediatric settings must attend to clinician training needs on tobacco treatment, embedding clinical encounter resources and reminders that match the linguistic and cultural needs and preferences of their patient populations, and increasing access to high quality interpreting services and culturally-congruent staff.

解决儿科诊所中少数种族和族裔家长的烟草筛查和治疗问题:障碍和促进因素。
导言:家庭二手烟(SHS)暴露仍然是美国少数种族和族裔儿童的一个重要健康问题。在儿科初级保健就诊期间为家长提供烟草治疗可减少儿童的 SHS 暴露。本研究调查了当前的烟草筛查实践,以及医疗系统利益相关者对在儿科就诊期间解决少数种族和族裔家长烟草使用问题的促进因素和障碍的看法:我们对明尼苏达州明尼阿波利斯-圣保罗市 5 家儿科初级保健诊所的临床医生、员工和卫生系统领导进行了 25 次半结构式访谈。研究参考了健康公平实施框架。采用定向内容分析和主题分析对访谈进行了分析:结果:参与者发现了解决少数民族家庭中父母吸烟问题的多层面促进因素和障碍。在临床接触中,障碍包括语言和文化障碍、医疗系统导航挑战、医疗不信任、临床医生和员工知识、技能和信心水平低、时间限制以及与外部指标不一致。促进者的中心工作是利用口译员的文化知识以及文化相近的临床医生和员工来减少医疗不信任和污名化,开发语言和文化相关的资源,并将提示和资源整合到电子健康记录中。与会者介绍了从以往的系统变革机制中吸取的经验教训将如何促进这项工作:作为儿科预防保健的一个组成部分,解决医疗系统、培训和资源以及临床医生和工作人员的语言和文化障碍对于加强他们解决少数种族和民族人口家庭 SHS 暴露问题的能力至关重要:临床医生和医疗系统工作人员在儿科初级保健就诊过程中,在识别和解决少数种族和族裔家长烟草使用问题方面存在独特的障碍。在儿科环境中扩大少数族裔家长烟草治疗机会的解决方案必须关注临床医生在烟草治疗方面的培训需求,嵌入符合患者群体语言和文化需求及偏好的临床就诊资源和提醒,并增加获得高质量口译服务和文化和谐员工的机会。
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来源期刊
Nicotine & Tobacco Research
Nicotine & Tobacco Research 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
10.60%
发文量
268
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Nicotine & Tobacco Research is one of the world''s few peer-reviewed journals devoted exclusively to the study of nicotine and tobacco. It aims to provide a forum for empirical findings, critical reviews, and conceptual papers on the many aspects of nicotine and tobacco, including research from the biobehavioral, neurobiological, molecular biologic, epidemiological, prevention, and treatment arenas. Along with manuscripts from each of the areas mentioned above, the editors encourage submissions that are integrative in nature and that cross traditional disciplinary boundaries. The journal is sponsored by the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (SRNT). It publishes twelve times a year.
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