Staff Knowledge, Attitudes, and Beliefs About Child Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Intake and Acceptability of a Pediatric Clinic-Based Beverage Screener.

Comput Inform Nurs

Author Affiliations: Patient Education and Nursing Clinical Advancement, Clinical Education, Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center (Ms Howell); Department of Pediatrics, Department of Epidemiology and Prevention, Wake Forest School of Medicine (Dr Skelton), Winston-Salem; General Internal Medicine, Duke Primary Care, Duke University, Raleigh (Dr Jayaprakash); and Department of Epidemiology and Prevention, Division of Public Health Sciences, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem (Dr Lewis), NC.

Published: June 2023

Beverages are the leading source of sugar in children's diets and a modifiable risk factor for adverse health conditions. Electronic health record-based screeners could facilitate health systems' efforts to reduce child consumption of sugary beverages. Before implementing a sugar-sweetened beverage screener in the electronic health record within academic healthcare system, 228 pediatric and family medicine clinic staff completed an online educational training to familiarize them with the screener and its rationale. Pretraining and posttraining surveys were used to examine the association between staff knowledge of sugar-sweetened beverages and the acceptability of the screening workflow. Respondents displayed high levels of pretraining knowledge about health consequences of added sugar intake, but lower levels of pediatric beverage guideline knowledge. Knowledge improved from pretraining to posttraining surveys, with high acceptability of the screening process. Staff compliance with sugar-sweetened beverage screening was examined using electronic health record data. During the 6 months after screener implementation, 47% of eligible pediatric patients were screened, with some variation in compliance by age group and practice type. This study demonstrated that engaging nursing and frontline staff to screen pediatric patients for behavioral determinants of health is feasible. Ongoing outreach and refreshers may improve sustainability.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CIN.0000000000000950DOI Listing

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