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

Nicotine Tob Res

Program in Health Disparities Research, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota, 717 Delaware Street SE, Suite 166, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55414, United States.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Household secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure is a serious health concern for racially and ethnically minoritized children in the U.S., and parental tobacco treatment during pediatric visits can help reduce this risk.
  • A study involving interviews with clinicians and health leaders in pediatric clinics revealed various facilitators and barriers to addressing parental tobacco use, including cultural and linguistic challenges as well as medical mistrust.
  • To improve care, it's crucial to enhance clinician training, provide culturally relevant resources, and streamline system processes to better support these families in reducing SHS exposure during pediatric preventive care.

Article 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.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ntr/ntae264DOI Listing

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