Gaps in Pediatricians’ Advice to Parents Regarding Early Childhood Aggression

Persistent early childhood aggression is a strong predictor of violence later in life. To determine how well general pediatricians counsel parents regarding aggression management strategies, responses to open-ended questions and endorsements of specific aggression management strategies, among 27 ped...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical pediatrics 2006-01, Vol.45 (1), p.23-28
Hauptverfasser: Scholer, Seth J., Nix, Robert L., Patterson, Barron
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container_title Clinical pediatrics
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creator Scholer, Seth J.
Nix, Robert L.
Patterson, Barron
description Persistent early childhood aggression is a strong predictor of violence later in life. To determine how well general pediatricians counsel parents regarding aggression management strategies, responses to open-ended questions and endorsements of specific aggression management strategies, among 27 pediatricians were evaluated. Sixteen (59%) screened regularly for aggression and 23 (85%) counseled (rather than referred) if there were parental concerns. Pediatricians were most likely to spontaneously recommend time-outs (85%) and verbal reprimands (78%) and much less likely to recommend other strategies such as redirecting (26%, p < 0.01) and promoting empathy (22%, p < 0.001). Pediatricians did endorse other aggression management strategies, however, when specifically asked about them. Pediatricians appear to take a limited approach to counseling parents of children with hurtful behavior. To increase health care providers’ role in violence prevention, more systematic efforts are needed to increase rates of screening for early childhood aggression and to broaden the scope of how pediatricians counsel parents.
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To determine how well general pediatricians counsel parents regarding aggression management strategies, responses to open-ended questions and endorsements of specific aggression management strategies, among 27 pediatricians were evaluated. Sixteen (59%) screened regularly for aggression and 23 (85%) counseled (rather than referred) if there were parental concerns. Pediatricians were most likely to spontaneously recommend time-outs (85%) and verbal reprimands (78%) and much less likely to recommend other strategies such as redirecting (26%, p &lt; 0.01) and promoting empathy (22%, p &lt; 0.001). Pediatricians did endorse other aggression management strategies, however, when specifically asked about them. Pediatricians appear to take a limited approach to counseling parents of children with hurtful behavior. 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To determine how well general pediatricians counsel parents regarding aggression management strategies, responses to open-ended questions and endorsements of specific aggression management strategies, among 27 pediatricians were evaluated. Sixteen (59%) screened regularly for aggression and 23 (85%) counseled (rather than referred) if there were parental concerns. Pediatricians were most likely to spontaneously recommend time-outs (85%) and verbal reprimands (78%) and much less likely to recommend other strategies such as redirecting (26%, p &lt; 0.01) and promoting empathy (22%, p &lt; 0.001). Pediatricians did endorse other aggression management strategies, however, when specifically asked about them. Pediatricians appear to take a limited approach to counseling parents of children with hurtful behavior. 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subjects Adult
Age Factors
Aggression
Aggressiveness
Child
Child Behavior
Child, Preschool
Children & youth
Counseling - standards
Counseling - trends
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Health Care Surveys
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Parents & parenting
Pediatrics
Pediatrics - standards
Pediatrics - trends
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians
Practice Patterns, Physicians' - trends
Prevalence
Probability
Quality of Health Care
Reproducibility of Results
Risk Assessment
Sex Factors
Surveys and Questionnaires
Violence - prevention & control
title Gaps in Pediatricians’ Advice to Parents Regarding Early Childhood Aggression
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