Adolescent Health and Social ProblemsA Method for Detection and Early Management
John H. Wasson, MD;
Steven W. Kairys, MD;
Eugene C. Nelson, DSc, MPH;
Norton Kalishman, MD;
Priscilla Baribeau;
Elizabeth Wasson
Arch Fam Med. 1995;4(1):51-56.
Abstract
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Objective To develop and test a method for identification and early management of the health and social problems of adolescents, many of which go undetected and untreated.
Methods Picture-and-word charts for the measurement of health and social problems formed the core of a brief, self-teaching lesson. Other sections of the lesson were designed to help teenagers interpret, invent solutions for, and communicate concerns about these problems. We examined the impact of the lesson on teenagers' understanding of themselves, their feelings, and their actions. Two hundred ninety-one adolescents served as subjects for this research.
Results Less than 5% of the respondents found the chart-based lesson difficult or bothersome in the way it probed personal topics. Ninety percent reported that the lesson would have some positive impact on their actions or feelings. Three to six weeks after completing the lesson, their opinion of its impact remained high, and 36% of the students reported that they had shown it to others outside the school.
Conclusion A chart-based lesson is well accepted by adolescents and can be used to overcome obstacles for the detection and early management of adolescents' health and social problems.
Author Affiliations
for the Dartmouth Primary Care Cooperative Information Project (COOP)
From the Department of Community and Family Medicine, Dartmouth Medical School (Dr Wasson and Mss Baribeau and Wasson), and the Departments of Maternal and Child Health (Dr Kairys) and Quality Research Measurement and Education (Dr Nelson), Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Hanover, NH; and the New Mexico Department of Health, Santa Fe (Dr Kalishman). A list of participants in the Dartmouth COOP Project appears at the end of the article.
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