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Post details: Pediatricians Can Help Prevent Violence07/18/08Pediatricians Can Help Prevent Violence
"This concept of anticipatory guidance—that pediatricians can have a public health impact through a brief, one-time office intervention—is key," says Shari Barkin, MD, director of the division of general pediatrics at the Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt, who designed and implemented the study with coauthors. The research was based on changing factors previously shown to impact the risk of future violent behavior, such as: excessive media time (computer games and television often depicting violence), access to unsafely stored firearms, and corporal punishment. One group of parents received specific violence-prevention intervention; the other group received only printed literature on literacy promotion and no information related to violence prevention. After six months, there was a significant increase in the number of caregivers limiting their children’s media time to fewer than two hours per day, with intervention group families watching, on average, 45 minutes less of media per day. Additionally, firearm owners exposed to the intervention in the study were twice as likely to store their firearms more safely. Use of time-outs was not significantly affected, but there was a decrease in families who reported corporal punishment, more in the intervention group than the control group. "We showed that this type of dialogue between the pediatrician and the family, which only lasts three to four minutes, can motivate change," Barkin says. — Source: Vanderbilt University Medical Center
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