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Matern Child Health J ; 28(10): 1663-1670, 2024 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39283361

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To integrate a parenting assessment into primary care and assess pediatric providers' time needed to review it and their perceptions of the process. DESCRIPTION: The Quick Parenting Assessment (QPA) is a validated, 13 item parent support tool that assesses for healthy and unhealthy parenting practices. Higher QPAs indicate more unhealthy parenting being used. In a clinic serving low-income parents, the QPA was integrated into the 15 month, 30 month, 5 year, and 8 year well child visits. After each well child visit in which the QPA was administered, providers were invited to complete a one-page survey-315 surveys were included in the analysis. ASSESSMENT: Most QPAs (78.7%) were low risk (QPA < = 2), 14.6% were medium risk (QPA = 3-4), and 6.7% were high risk (QPA > 4). The median time was 15-30 s to review low risk QPAs and 30 s to 1 min to review high risk QPAs. For most QPA reviews, health care providers reported that the QPA increased their objectivity in determining the level of support needed (68%), facilitated communication about parenting (77%), and increased the value of the visit (68%). CONCLUSION: A validated parenting assessment tool, integrated into pediatric primary care, appears to work for pediatric health care providers. These findings have implications for supporting parents in pediatrics, value-based care, and disease prevention.


Subject(s)
Parenting , Primary Health Care , Humans , Parenting/psychology , Female , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires , Parents/psychology , Adult , Child , Pediatrics/methods , Health Personnel/psychology , Child, Preschool , Infant , Poverty
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