Clinician Telephone Training to Reduce Family Tobacco Use: Analysis of Transcribed Recordings
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management. 2016 February;23(2)
References
Practice Recruitment and Eligibility
Practices were recruited through the American Academy of Pediatrics using direct emails, newsletter/listserv articles, phone calls to members, and in-person recruitment at national meetings. Eligible practices were located in a non–hospital-based setting, had an average patient flow of at least 50 patients per day, used an electronic medical record (EMR) system, and were matched in each state based on practice size and smoking rate. Interested practices also had to be willing to host a research assistant to collect exit interview data from parents. Practices were excluded if they took part in previous CEASE studies or were actively enrolling participants into other tobacco control research studies. Based on these criteria, 18 eligible practices from Indiana, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Michigan, and Virginia agreed to participate in the study. Of the 6 states, one state was chosen as a replacement state. Five practices from the remaining states were assigned to the intervention group, 5 to the control group, and 5 were assigned to the replacement group in case an intervention or control practice in their state withdrew from the study. Each intervention practice participated in a peer-to-peer training call and a whole office training call. Data analyzed in this paper was collected from all 10 intervention practice training calls.
Training Calls Data Collection
The peer-to-peer and whole office training calls were recorded and transcribed. Permission to record the calls was requested by the trainer (the principal investigator of the study) and given verbally by each person being trained. The training call recordings were then transcribed verbatim by a commercial service; the transcriptions were spot-checked for accuracy.
The transcripts were first read closely by the first author (BHW), then coded inductively into relevant themes that emerged from the calls. The inductive coding was guided by the questions and concerns that the clinicians raised during the training, as well as the ways in which the trainer addressed these concerns and tailored the training to the needs and interests of the pediatric clinicians [26]. The coding was reviewed and confirmed by the other study team members.
After the data were coded into themes, the coded data were analyzed by the first author using qualitative description. Qualitative description is a method of analyzing coded qualitative data by looking at the words and meanings expressed by respondents [27]. Through this method of analysis, we were able to understand what concerns the clinicians and staff voiced about aspects of the CEASE intervention.
Ethics
The study was approved institutional review boards at Massachusetts General Hospital, the AAP, and the health care practices that required local IRB approval. The quotes used in this paper have been anonymized and cleaned to remove any identifying information, such as location and names.
Peer-to-Peer Training Calls
The peer-to-peer training calls were conducted after training and study materials arrived. The project leader (a pediatrician in the practice who was interested in spearheading the CEASE intervention) was asked to watch the training video. Using an evidence-based, previously developed call script [28], the principal investigator trained the project leader in key aspects of addressing family tobacco use and exposure, such as using an electronic tablet screener survey to identify family members who smoke, exploring techniques for prescribing or recommending NRT, and identifying ways to connect family members to free tobacco cessation counseling and support services. On occasion, other staff from the pediatric office (eg, a nurse or office manager) joined the call.