ABSTRACT
Background: Nurse practitioners serve an essential role in the completion of age-appropriate adolescent high-risk behavior screenings including tobacco/nicotine, alcohol, illicit drug use, and sexual activity during well-child examinations (WCEs).
Local problem: Midwestern adolescents demonstrate a suboptimal rate of engaging in annual preventative medical visits in comparison to national data.
Methods: This mixed-methods quality improvement pilot sought to evaluate health care providers' beliefs, general clinic processes, and the overall quality of WCEs among adolescents aged 11-17 years in two midwestern primary care clinics. Quantitative data were obtained through queried reports and manual electronic health record chart audits. Qualitative data were obtained through focus group interviews.
Interventions: Interventional strategies included providing education to key stakeholders regarding data analysis findings indicating process deficiencies regarding adolescent WCEs. Project members championed integration of advanced practice nurses as leaders of change within urban, multisite tertiary health care systems.
Results: Results demonstrate that the lack of standardized assessment during an adolescent WCE can lead to fragmentation of high-risk behavior screenings.
Conclusions: This quality improvement pilot demonstrates the need for nurse practitioners to be at the forefront of interprofessional committees advancing the implementation of evidence-based guidelines and practice improvement initiatives. Standardization of high-risk behavior screening as part of the WCE in adolescence provides the foundation for health promotion and chronic disease prevention spanning into adulthood.