Promoting social emotional development during the paediatric well-child visit: a demonstration project.

BMJ Open Quality
Meghan L JohnsonScott D Berns

Abstract

Supporting social emotional development, beginning at birth, can improve lifelong health. The American Academy of Paediatrics recommends 12 well-child visits between birth and age 3 years. Each well-child visit provides a unique opportunity to interact with and support families to promote social emotional development of children. Eighteen US paediatric practices joined a learning community to use improvement science to test and implement evidence-informed strategies that nurture parent-child relationships and promote the social emotional development of young children.Quality improvement methods were used to integrate 11 strategies into well-child visits between birth and age 3 years and measure the improvements with a set of outcome, process and balancing measures. Participation among the 18 paediatric practices was high with 72% of teams attending monthly webinars and 97% of teams attending the three learning sessions. Over 12 months, the percentage of children receiving age-appropriate social emotional development screens at participating practices' well-child visits increased from a baseline median of 83% to 93%.Current paediatric practice in the USA focuses primarily on cognitive and physical development, and paediatric pro...Continue Reading

References

Mar 13, 2002·Ambulatory Pediatrics : the Official Journal of the Ambulatory Pediatric Association·A L OlsonA J Dietrich
Dec 3, 2003·Quality & Safety in Health Care·J C BenneyanP E Plsek
Jan 11, 2012·Pediatrics·Rahil D BriggsAndrew D Racine
Jan 23, 2013·The British Journal of General Practice : the Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners·Frans DerksenAntoine Lagro-Janssen
Oct 26, 2013·Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry·Lawrence S WissowRachel Zelkowitz

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