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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

The Disrupt: A Measure Of Parent Distraction With Phones And Mobile Devices And Associations With Depression, Stress, And Parenting Quality., Brandon T. Mcdaniel Phd Dec 2021

The Disrupt: A Measure Of Parent Distraction With Phones And Mobile Devices And Associations With Depression, Stress, And Parenting Quality., Brandon T. Mcdaniel Phd

Health Services and Informatics Research

Abstract

The landscape of modern parenting has shifted as an increasing number of parents have and utilize smartphones and other mobile devices throughout the day. A validated measure of parent distraction with these devices is needed in the field. It is important to have a validated measure of parent distraction with mobile devices (e.g., phubbing, technoference), as this distraction can be common at times and could negatively impact the quality of parenting that children receive. In the current study, I developed a brief, parent-reported survey measure of parent distraction (DISRUPT), examined its reliability and validity (convergent, divergent) in two survey …


Improving Social Determinants Of Health Screening Implementation Through Collaboration: Leveraging A Clinical-Academic Partnership., Bradley E. Iott Mph, Ms, Jessica Pater Phd, Ms, Shauna Wagner Bsn, Rn, Tammy Toscos Phd, Tiffany Veinot Phd, Mls Nov 2020

Improving Social Determinants Of Health Screening Implementation Through Collaboration: Leveraging A Clinical-Academic Partnership., Bradley E. Iott Mph, Ms, Jessica Pater Phd, Ms, Shauna Wagner Bsn, Rn, Tammy Toscos Phd, Tiffany Veinot Phd, Mls

Health Services and Informatics Research

Problem Addressed and Project Purpose Motivated by the transition to value-based payment models, 1 there are growing efforts to capture information about patients’ social determinants of health (SDOH) in United States (US) healthcare and provide subsequent services targeted at those health-related social risk factors. The collection of data about social risk factors creates opportunities for healthcare providers to make referrals to social service agencies to address individual patients’ needs and to tailor treatment plans to individuals’ specific needs, a goal of precision health2,3. Hence, by accurately and appropriately collecting SDOH data from patients and actionably displaying these data to providers, …


Nothing New Under The Sun: How Existing Screening Programs Can Inform The Design Of Social Determinants Of Health Screening In Health Care., Bradley Iott, Denise Anthony, Jessica Pater, Shauna Wagner, Tammy Toscos Phd, Tiffany Veinot Jan 2020

Nothing New Under The Sun: How Existing Screening Programs Can Inform The Design Of Social Determinants Of Health Screening In Health Care., Bradley Iott, Denise Anthony, Jessica Pater, Shauna Wagner, Tammy Toscos Phd, Tiffany Veinot

Health Services and Informatics Research

Research Objective Up to 80% of the factors contributing to an individual’s health status are social determinants of health (SDOH). As healthcare systems transition to value-based payment models which compensate providers for patient health outcomes, many have called for healthcare organizations to screen patients for SDOH-related social needs and for providers to consider them when providing medical care. Screening for social needs is expected to involve collecting information that may make patients feel vulnerable, creating a need to develop screening methods that emphasize patient comfort. Similarly, social needs screening may place burdens on providers that have limited training and time …


Daily Technology Interruptions And Emotional And Relational Well-Being., Brandon T. Mcdaniel Phd, Michelle Drouin Oct 2019

Daily Technology Interruptions And Emotional And Relational Well-Being., Brandon T. Mcdaniel Phd, Michelle Drouin

Health Services and Informatics Research

The current abundance of technology in daily life creates opportunities for interruptions in couple interactions, termed technoference or phubbing. The current study examined reports from both partners in 173 romantic relationships who completed daily surveys on technoference and relational well-being measures across 14 days. By using daily diary data, we were able to examine within-person associations and more closely approximate everyday life. Utilizing multilevel modeling, we found that on days when participants rated more technoference than usual, they felt worse about their relationship, perceived more conflict over technology use, rated their face-toface interactions as less positive, and experienced more negative …