4.2 Article

Consider the root of the problem: increasing trainee skills at assessing and addressing social determinants of health

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages 523-532

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/tbm/ibz046

Keywords

Social determinants of health; Standardized patients; Social needs; Simulation; Training; Adolescents

Funding

  1. Health Resources and Services Administration [D09HP26958]
  2. Pipeline to Health Careers subcontract through Alameda County Center for Healthy Schools and Communities (Atlantic Philanthropies)
  3. National Institute of Nursing Research of the National Institutes of Health [T32NR013456]

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National pediatrics guidelines recommend screening all patients for unmet social needs to improve self-management of chronic conditions and health outcomes and to reduce costs. Practitioners involved in training pediatric clinicians need to understand how to prepare pediatric clinicians to effectively conduct social needs screening and where current training methods fall short. Our qualitative study investigated whether using standardized patients during trainee education improved trainees' ability to assess and address adolescent patients' social needs. Vulnerable adolescents should be prioritized in social determinants of health translational research because increased risk taking and emotionality may predispose this population to lower self-esteem and self-efficacy. We trained 23 adolescents (aged 16-18) recruited from an urban health-career education program to act as standardized patients (SPs). Two cohorts of nurse practitioner trainees (n = 36) enrolled in a simulation where the patient-actor presented with a minor chief complaint and related a fabricated complex social history. Pre-encounter, Cohort 1 (n = 18) reviewed psychosocial screeners; Cohort 2 (n = 18) were given in-depth information about social needs before meeting patients. SPs gave individualized feedback to trainees, and self-reflections were analyzed using thematic analysis. In Cohort 1, trainees identified some social needs, yet few intervened. Trainees expressed discomfort in: (a) asking socially sensitive questions and (b) triaging patient versus clinician priorities. Cohort 2 demonstrated improvements compared to Cohort 1 in identifying needs yet had similar difficulty with organization and questioning. Trainees were able to utilize a lower-stakes interaction with patient-actors to raise awareness regarding a patient's sensitive needs and to organize care surrounding these patient-centered concerns.

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