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Primary Care Role in Expanded Newborn Screening: After the Heel Prick Test

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Date 2013 Aug 16
PMID 23946032
Citations 5
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Abstract

Objective: To examine the role of primary care providers in informing and supporting families who receive positive screening results.

Design: Cross-sectional survey.

Setting: Ontario.

Participants: Family physicians, pediatricians, and midwives involved in newborn care.

Main Outcome Measures: Beliefs, practices, and barriers related to providing information to families who receive positive screening results for their newborns.

Results: A total of 819 providers participated (adjusted response rate of 60.9%). Of the respondents, 67.4% to 81.0% agreed that it was their responsibility to provide care to families of newborns who received positive screening results, and 64.2% to 84.8% agreed they should provide brochures or engage in general discussions about the identified conditions. Of the pediatricians, 67.3% endorsed having detailed discussions with families, but only 24.1% of family physicians and 27.6% of midwives endorsed this practice. All provider groups reported less involvement in information provision than they believed they should have. This discrepancy was most evident for family physicians: most stated that they should provide brochures (64.2%) or engage in general discussions (73.5%), but only a minority did so (15.3% and 27.7%, respectively). Family physicians reported insufficient time (42.2%), compensation (52.2%), and training (72.3%) to play this role, and only a minority agreed they were up to date (18.5%) or confident (16.5%) regarding newborn screening.

Conclusion: Providers of primary newborn care see an information-provision role for themselves in caring for families who receive positive newborn screening results. Efforts to further define the scope of this role combined with efforts to mitigate existing barriers are warranted.

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