• Hospital pediatrics · Jul 2015

    Improving Clinician Attitudes of Respect and Trust for Persons With Sickle Cell Disease.

    • Carlton Haywood, Jacqueline Williams-Reade, Cynda Rushton, Mary Catherine Beach, and Gail Geller.
    • The Berman Institute of Bioethics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland; and chaywoodjr@jhu.edu.
    • Hosp Pediatr. 2015 Jul 1;5(7):377-84.

    ObjectiveTo test the effect of 1 high-intensity, and 1 reduced-intensity, educational intervention designed to improve health care provider attitudes toward youth with sickle cell disease (SCD).MethodsWe exposed a regional sample of pediatric health care providers to a 2.5-day high-intensity educational and experiential intervention using videos about the SCD patient experience. Additionally, we traveled to a different set of regional health care institutions and offered pediatric providers a reduced-intensity intervention, consisting of a 90-minute lunchtime in-service centered on our same set of videos about the patient's experience. We assessed the impact of both interventions by taking pre/post measurements of the negative and positive attitudes expressed by participating providers toward patients with SCD.ResultsBoth interventions tested elicited improvements in the SCD attitudes expressed by the pediatric providers as suggested through a reduction in measured negative attitude scores (20.0 vs 12.1, P < .001), and an improvement in positive attitude scores (67.1 vs 72.2, P < .001). Further testing suggested that the high-intensity intervention elicited a stronger effect than the reduced-intensity intervention across multiple attitudinal domains.ConclusionsVideo-based interventions can be used to improve the attitudes of pediatric providers toward patients with SCD. The availability of interventions of varying intensities provides greater flexibility in designing efforts to advance the quality of SCD care through the improvement of provider attitudes.Copyright © 2015 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

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