Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
Margaret Clamp a Colwick
Vale Surgery, Colwick, Nottingham NG4 2DU, b Division of General Practice, University of Nottingham
Medical School, Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham NG7
2UH
Correspondence to: Dr Kendrick
Denise.Kendrick{at}nottingham.ac.uk
| |
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Objective: To assess effectiveness of general
practitioner advice about child safety, and provision of low cost
safety equipment to low income families, on use of safety equipment and safe practices at home.
Design: Randomised, unblinded, controlled trial with
initial assessment and six week follow up by telephone survey. Twenty
families from intervention and control groups were randomly selected
for a home visit to assess validity of responses to second survey.
Setting: A general practice in Nottingham.
Subjects: 98% (165/169) of families with children
aged under 5 years registered with the practice.
Interventions: General practitioner safety advice
plus, for families receiving means tested state benefits, access to
safety equipment at low cost. Control families received usual care.
Main outcome measures: Possession and use of safety
equipment and safe practices at home.
Results: Before intervention, the two groups differed
only in possession of fireguards. After intervention, significantly more families in intervention group used fireguards (relative risk
1.89, 95% confidence interval 1.18 to 2.94), smoke alarms (1.14, 1.04 to 1.25), socket covers (1.27, 1.10 to 1.48), locks on cupboards for
storing cleaning materials (1.38, 1.02 to 1.88), and door slam devices
(3.60, 2.17 to 5.97). Also, significantly more families in intervention
group showed very safe practice in storage of sharp objects (1.98, 1.38 to 2.83), storage of medicines (1.15, 1.03 to 1.28), window safety
(1.30, 1.06 to 1.58), fireplace safety (1.84, 1.34 to 2.54), socket
safety (1.77, 1.37 to 2.28), smoke alarm safety (1.11, 1.01 to 1.22),
and door slam safety (7.00, 3.15 to 15.6). Stratifying results by
receipt of state benefits showed that intervention was at least as
effective in families receiving benefits as others.
Conclusions: General practitioner advice, coupled
with access to low cost equipment for low income families, increased use of safety equipment and other safe practices. These findings are
encouraging for provision of injury prevention in primary care.
|
Key messages
|
| |
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The Health of the Nation suggests that primary healthcare teams should provide safety advice to parents during child health surveillance programmes, advise on and provide access to safety equipment, check and advise on hazards in the home, provide advice on first aid, and advise the community on safety.1 Studies have suggested that a lack of time and expertise are often quoted as factors that limit the provision of injury prevention in primary care.2-10 Hence, it has been suggested that any initiative to be introduced into general practice must be quick and easy to carry out.11
Studies in the United States have shown that counselling by physicians improved safety behaviour and reduced hazards,12-15 and one small study showed a reduction in falls in infants.16 In addition, increasing access to safety equipment increased the installation of smoke alarms17 and socket covers but not cupboard locks, which were more difficult to install. 18 19
However, differences between the healthcare systems of the United Kingdom and the United States may limit the generalisability of these studies to UK settings. We therefore undertook this study to assess the effectiveness of counselling on injury prevention by a general practitioner in conjunction with access to low cost safety equipment for families on a low income in the United Kingdom. The study received approval from the ethics committee of Queen's Medical Centre.
| |
Subjects and methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Subjects
The study population comprised the 169 families with
children aged
5 years that were registered with a single handed
general practice in an urban area of Nottingham. The 165 (98%)
families that responded to a questionnaire on child safety practices
were numbered from 1 to 165, and we used random number tables to
allocate them, by number, to an intervention or a control group. We
calculated that 73 families were required in each group, based on
=0.1,
=0.05, a baseline possession of safety equipment of
60%,20 and a difference of 25% in possession of safety
equipment. The figure shows the flow of families through the
trial.
|
Questionnaire
We used a questionnaire to obtain information on
families' use of safety equipment; storage of sharp objects, cleaning
products, and medicines; risk factors for unintentional injury; and
sociodemographic factors. The questions on risk and sociodemographic
factors had previously been validated.21 The questionnaire
was designed to be administered by telephone or postal survey. It was
piloted in another general practice with a similar patient population, with 30 questionnaires administered by each method. No major changes were made to the questionnaire based on the pilot study.
Intervention
The intervention consisted of standardised advice and
safety leaflets concerning smoke alarms, stair gates, fireguards,
cupboard locks, covers for electric sockets, door slam devices, safe
storage of medicines, sharp objects, and cleaning materials. Families receiving means tested state benefits were offered a smoke alarm for
50p and two window locks, three cupboard locks, six socket covers, or a
door slam device for 20p, all available from the surgery at the time of
the consultation. Stair gates and fireguards were offered at £5 per
item via the health district's low cost scheme, which was available to
families receiving benefits across Nottingham Health District
(including control families) and was accessed via health visitors, with
equipment being delivered to a local health centre for collection by
parents.
|
Statistical analysis
We analysed the data, on an intention to treat basis, using
SPSS for Windows.22 The results are presented
as relative risks (95% confidence intervals) of using safety equipment
and behaving safely, and the number needed to treat to facilitate one
family to use safety equipment or behave safely. We assessed the
consistency between the responses to the questionnaire and observed
safety practices by means of
coefficients.23
| |
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The consistency of responses to the questionnaire and at
the home visit was high: 21 questions showed complete agreement, with
coefficients of 1; for five questions
=0.75-0.99; for six
questions
=0.59-0.74; and for four questions
<0.60. Two questions had almost complete agreement (95% in each case), but the
coefficient was low because all but one of the responses were
positive on the first questionnaire.24 The two remaining questions with low
coefficients concerned the level at which sharp
objects were stored in the kitchen (
=0.49) and the use of socket
covers on unused sockets (
=0.33).
Table 1 shows the baseline characteristics of the study population. Thirty three per cent of the families in the intervention group and 35% of those in the control group reported that at least one of their children had had more than one attendance at the general practice or accident and emergency department for an injury.
After the intervention, families in the intervention group were more likely to use a range of items of safety equipment than were control families (table 2). A higher proportion of families in the intervention group were categorised as safe for their storage of sharp objects and medicines and for safety of windows, fireplaces, electric sockets, smoke alarms, and door slams (table 3), suggesting that even when these families did not obtain items of safety equipment, such as cupboard locks and window catches, they did change their safety behaviour.
|
|
After stratifying the results by receipt of means tested benefits, we found that, among those receiving benefits, a significantly higher proportion of families in the intervention group than controls were categorised as safe for five of the nine safety practices. Among those not receiving benefits, significantly more families in the intervention group were categorised as safe for three of the nine safety practices. This suggests that the intervention was equally, if not more, effective in the families receiving benefits.
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The high response rate to the baseline questionnaire suggests the results of this study are generalisable to the practice population. The similarity of the study population to that of Nottingham in terms of sociodemographic factors25 suggests these results may be applicable to a wider population, although the lower proportion of families belonging to an ethnic minority in the study means that caution must be exercised in extrapolating the results of this study to minority groups.
As safety practices were self reported, it is possible that families receiving the intervention overreported safety practices to a greater degree than did control families, so overestimating the effect of the intervention.26 However, the high degree of consistency of responses to questionnaire and the safety practices observed on the home visit suggest that overreporting did not occur to any great degree and did not occur differentially in the intervention group.
The results from this small study suggest that general practitioners can increase safety practices through giving routine safety advice and providing low cost safety equipment. The short follow up period means we cannot draw conclusions about the long term effectiveness of such an intervention, and further studies are needed. Further evaluation is needed in other practices to see if our findings can be replicated elsewhere. Furthermore, the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of other members of the primary care team undertaking the same intervention programme requires evaluation. The short time scale and small sample size of this study precluded any assessment of reductions in frequency or severity of injury, but such evaluations are needed before new interventions are introduced into routine primary care.
Our finding that the intervention was at least equally effective in families receiving benefits is important as there is debate about the relative effectiveness of population versus targeted approaches to injury prevention in primary care. 21 27 28 This study used a population approach, with tailoring of the interventions to specific groups in order that families relying on state benefits were not disproportionately disadvantaged by taking part in the interventions. This is the first UK study to suggest that a population approach would be equally effective in different socioeconomic groups. It has been argued that the population approach would lead to widening inequalities in health, as interventions may be less effective in those most at risk.27 This study suggests this is not the case, but further work, with a larger sample from a larger number of practices, is needed to confirm this finding.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
The safety leaflets used in this study included Play it Safe (Health Education Authority, 1996), Your Baby's Safety At Home and At Play (Mothercare, 1994), and Home Safety Checklist (Child Accident Prevention Trust, 1996).
DK coordinated the formulation of the primary study hypothesis, discussed core ideas, designed the protocol and questionnaire, and participated in data analysis and writing of the paper. MC initiated the idea for the study; discussed core ideas; carried out the literature search and pilot studies; modified the questionnaire; administered the questionnaire, intervention, and validation studies; entered and verified the data; and participated in data analysis and writing of the paper.
Funding: Nottingham Health Authority provided a grant of £500 for the purchase of safety equipment. This research was undertaken as part of a Masters Degree in Medical Science in Primary Health Care, in the Division of General Practice at Nottingham University.
Conflict of interest: None.
| |
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
(Accepted 22 April 1998)
Read all Rapid Responses