Who accompanies a child to the office of the physician?
Autor: | Yair Bar-David, Jacob Urkin, Natalia Bilenko, Eli Gazala, Nurit Barak, Joav Merrick |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Low income
Parents medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Attitude of Health Personnel Minor (academic) Pediatrics Appointments and Schedules medicine Humans Israel Parent-Child Relations Prospective cohort study Child Practical implications Health policy Physician-Patient Relations business.industry Health Policy Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Infant Newborn Infant Infant newborn Clinic visit Minors Family medicine Child Preschool Pediatrics Perinatology and Child Health Regression Analysis business |
Zdroj: | International journal of adolescent medicine and health. 20(4) |
ISSN: | 0334-0139 |
Popis: | The arrival of a minor, unaccompanied by a parent, for a clinic visit, is challenging to the physician with legal, ethical, and practical implications. This prospective study, conducted in three community pediatric clinics, examined the relationship of accompanying persons to the minors visiting the clinics. About 90% of the 1,104 visits were with an accompanying parent, mostly a mother. Over 9% of minors, especially adolescents, arrived at the clinic unaccompanied by a parent. A regression analysis demonstrated that for each increase of one month in age there was a 2% increased chance for a visit without a parent (p < .0001). Adolescents were more likely to be among the 6% of minors, who visited the clinic alone, with a rate 0.066 per 1,000 visits in the more affluent community, compared to 0.019 and 0.016 in the middle and low income communities (p < .001). Physicians as well as parents should be made aware of the regulations regarding accompaniment of minors on a visit to the clinic. Policies regarding unaccompanied visits should take into account the risk posed by the absence of a parent versus the right of adolescents for independence and privacy. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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