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Dive into the research topics where Stephanie Mayne is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephanie Mayne.


Pediatrics | 2013

Effectiveness of Decision Support for Families, Clinicians, or Both on HPV Vaccine Receipt

Alexander G. Fiks; Robert W. Grundmeier; Stephanie Mayne; Lihai Song; Kristen A. Feemster; Dean Karavite; Cayce C. Hughes; James Massey; Ron Keren; Louis M. Bell; Richard C. Wasserman; A. Russell Localio

OBJECTIVE: To improve human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination rates, we studied the effectiveness of targeting automated decision support to families, clinicians, or both. METHODS: Twenty-two primary care practices were cluster-randomized to receive a 3-part clinician-focused intervention (education, electronic health record-based alerts, and audit and feedback) or none. Overall, 22 486 girls aged 11 to 17 years due for HPV vaccine dose 1, 2, or 3 were randomly assigned within each practice to receive family-focused decision support with educational telephone calls. Randomization established 4 groups: family-focused, clinician-focused, combined, and no intervention. We measured decision support effectiveness by final vaccination rates and time to vaccine receipt, standardized for covariates and limited to those having received the previous dose for HPV #2 and 3. The 1-year study began in May 2010. RESULTS: Final vaccination rates for HPV #1, 2, and 3 were 16%, 65%, and 63% among controls. The combined intervention increased vaccination rates by 9, 8, and 13 percentage points, respectively. The control group achieved 15% vaccination for HPV #1 and 50% vaccination for HPV #2 and 3 after 318, 178, and 215 days. The combined intervention significantly accelerated vaccination by 151, 68, and 93 days. The clinician-focused intervention was more effective than the family-focused intervention for HPV #1, but less effective for HPV #2 and 3. CONCLUSIONS: A clinician-focused intervention was most effective for initiating the HPV vaccination series, whereas a family-focused intervention promoted completion. Decision support directed at both clinicians and families most effectively promotes HPV vaccine series receipt.


Pediatrics | 2015

Parent-Reported Outcomes of a Shared Decision-Making Portal in Asthma: A Practice-Based RCT

Alexander G. Fiks; Stephanie Mayne; Dean Karavite; Andrew Suh; O'Hara R; Localio Ar; Michelle Ross; Robert W. Grundmeier

BACKGROUND: Electronic health record (EHR)-linked patient portals are a promising approach to facilitate shared decision-making between families of children with chronic conditions and pediatricians. This study evaluated the feasibility, acceptability, and impact of MyAsthma, an EHR-linked patient portal supporting shared decision-making for pediatric asthma. METHODS: We conducted a 6-month randomized controlled trial of MyAsthma at 3 primary care practices. Families were randomized to MyAsthma, which tracks families’ asthma treatment concerns and goals, children’s asthma symptoms, medication side effects and adherence, and provides decision support, or to standard care. Outcomes included the feasibility and acceptability of MyAsthma for families, child health care utilization and asthma control, and the number of days of missed school (child) and work (parent). Descriptive statistics and longitudinal regression models assessed differences in outcomes between study arms. RESULTS: We enrolled 60 families, 30 in each study arm (mean age 8.3 years); 57% of parents in the intervention group used MyAsthma during at least 5 of the 6 study months. Parents of children with moderate to severe persistent asthma used the portal more than others; 92% were satisfied with MyAsthma. Parents reported that use improved their communication with the office, ability to manage asthma, and awareness of the importance of ongoing attention to treatment. Parents in the intervention group reported that children had a lower frequency of asthma flares and intervention parents missed fewer days of work due to asthma. CONCLUSIONS: Use of an EHR-linked asthma portal was feasible and acceptable to families and improved clinically meaningful outcomes.


Pediatrics | 2012

Shared Decision-Making and Health Care Expenditures Among Children With Special Health Care Needs

Alexander G. Fiks; Stephanie Mayne; Localio Ar; Evaline A. Alessandrini; James P. Guevara

Background And Objectives To understand the association between shared decision-making (SDM) and health care expenditures and use among children with special health care needs (CSHCN). Methods We identified CSHCN <18 years in the 2002–2006 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey by using the CSHCN Screener. Outcomes included health care expenditures (total, out-of-pocket, office-based, inpatient, emergency department [ED], and prescription) and utilization (hospitalization, ED and office visit, and prescription rates). The main exposure was the pattern of SDM over the 2 study years (increasing, decreasing, or unchanged high or low). We assessed the impact of these patterns on the change in expenditures and utilization over the 2 study years. Results Among 2858 subjects representing 12 million CSHCN, 15.9% had increasing, 15.2% decreasing, 51.9% unchanged high, and 17.0% unchanged low SDM. At baseline, mean per child total expenditures were


Pediatrics | 2013

Parental Preferences and Goals Regarding ADHD Treatment

Alexander G. Fiks; Stephanie Mayne; Elena DeBartolo; Thomas J. Power; James P. Guevara

2131. Over the 2 study years, increasing SDM was associated with a decrease of


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2014

Effect of Decision Support on Missed Opportunities for Human Papillomavirus Vaccination

Stephanie Mayne; Nathalie duRivage; Kristen A. Feemster; A. Russell Localio; Robert W. Grundmeier; Alexander G. Fiks

339 (95% confidence interval:


The Journal of ambulatory care management | 2014

A shared e-decision support portal for pediatric asthma.

Alexander G. Fiks; Stephanie Mayne; Dean Karavite; Elena DeBartolo; Robert W. Grundmeier

21,


BMC Pediatrics | 2012

Shared decision making and behavioral impairment: a national study among children with special health care needs

Alexander G. Fiks; Stephanie Mayne; A. Russell Localio; Chris Feudtner; Evaline A. Alessandrini; James P. Guevara

660) in total health care costs. Rates of hospitalization and ED visits declined by 4.0 (0.1, 7.9) and 11.3 (4.3, 18.3) per 100 CSHCN, and office visits by 1.2 (0.3, 2.0) per child with increasing SDM. Relative to decreasing SDM, increasing SDM was associated with significantly lower total and out-of-pocket costs, and fewer office visits. Conclusions We found that increasing SDM was associated with decreased utilization and expenditures for CSHCN. Prospective study is warranted to confirm if fostering SDM reduces the costs of caring for CSHCN for the health system and families.


Pediatrics | 2016

Variations in Mental Health Diagnosis and Prescribing Across Pediatric Primary Care Practices

Stephanie Mayne; Michelle Ross; Lihai Song; Banita McCarn; Jennifer Steffes; Weiwei Liu; Benyamin Margolis; Romuladus E. Azuine; Edward M. Gotlieb; Robert W. Grundmeier; Laurel K. Leslie; Russell Localio; Richard C. Wasserman; Alexander G. Fiks

OBJECTIVES: To describe the association between parents’ attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) treatment preferences and goals and treatment initiation. METHODS: Parents/guardians of children aged 6 to 12 years diagnosed with ADHD in the past 18 months and not currently receiving combined treatment (both medication and behavior therapy [BT]) were recruited from 8 primary care sites and an ADHD treatment center. Parents completed the ADHD Preference and Goal Instrument, a validated measure, and reported treatment receipt at 6 months. Logistic regression was used to analyze the association of baseline preferences and goals with treatment initiation. Using linear regression, we compared the change in preferences and goals over 6 months for children who initiated treatment versus others. RESULTS: The study included 148 parents/guardians. Baseline medication and BT preference were associated with treatment initiation (odds ratio [OR]: 2.6 [95% confidence interval (CI):1.2–5.5] and 2.2 [95% CI: 1.0–5.1], respectively). The goal of academic achievement was associated with medication initiation (OR: 2.1 [95% CI: 1.3–3.4]) and the goal of behavioral compliance with initiation of BT (OR: 1.6 [95% CI: 1.1–2.4]). At 6 months, parents whose children initiated medication or BT compared with others had decreased academic and behavioral goals, suggesting their goals were attained. However, only those initiating BT had diminished interpersonal relationship goals. CONCLUSIONS: Parental treatment preferences were associated with treatment initiation, and those with distinct goals selected different treatments. Results support the formal measurement of preferences and goals in practice as prioritized in recent national guidelines for ADHD management.


Pediatrics | 2016

Improving HPV Vaccination Rates Using Maintenance-of-Certification Requirements.

Alexander G. Fiks; Xianqun Luan; Stephanie Mayne

BACKGROUND Missed opportunities for human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccination are common, presenting a barrier to achieving widespread vaccine coverage and preventing infection. PURPOSE To compare the impact of clinician- versus family-focused decision support, none, or both on captured opportunities for HPV vaccination. DESIGN Twelve-month cluster randomized controlled trial conducted in 2010-2011. SETTING/PARTICIPANTS Adolescent girls aged 11-17 years due for HPV Dose 1, 2, or 3 receiving care at primary care practices. INTERVENTION Twenty-two primary care practices were cluster randomized to receive a three-part clinician-focused intervention (educational sessions, electronic health record-based alerts, and performance feedback) or none. Within each practice, girls were randomized at the patient level to receive family-focused, automated, educational phone calls or none. Randomization resulted in four groups: clinician-focused, family-focused, combined, or no intervention. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Standardized proportions of captured opportunities (due vaccine received at clinician visit) were calculated among girls in each study arm. Analyses were conducted in 2013. RESULTS Among 17,016 adolescent girls and their 32,472 visits (14,247 preventive, 18,225 acute), more HPV opportunities were captured at preventive than acute visits (36% vs 4%, p<0.001). At preventive visits, the clinician intervention increased captured opportunities by 9 percentage points for HPV-1 and 6 percentage points for HPV-3 (p≤0.01), but not HPV-2. At acute visits, the clinician and combined interventions significantly improved captured opportunities for all three doses (p≤0.01). The family intervention was similar to none. Results differed by practice setting; at preventive visits, the clinician intervention was more effective for HPV-1 in suburban than urban settings, whereas at acute visits, the clinician intervention was more effective for all doses at urban practices. CONCLUSIONS Clinician-focused decision support is a more effective strategy than family-focused to prevent missed HPV vaccination opportunities. Given the persistence of missed opportunities even in intervention groups, complementary strategies are needed. This study is registered at clinicaltrials.gov NCT01159093.


Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology | 2015

Changing Patterns of Alpha Agonist Medication Use in Children and Adolescents 2009–2011

Alexander G. Fiks; Stephanie Mayne; Lihai Song; Jennifer Steffes; Weiwei Liu; Banita McCarn; Benyamin Margolis; Alan Grimes; Edward M. Gotlieb; Russell Localio; Michelle Ross; Robert W. Grundmeier; Richard C. Wasserman; Laurel K. Leslie

We describe the user-centered development of an electronic medical record–based portal, “MyAsthma,” designed to facilitate shared decision making in pediatric asthma. Interviews and focus groups with 7 parents of children with asthma and 51 clinical team members elicited 2 overarching requirements: that the portal should support sustained communication and ensure patient safety. Parents and clinicians prioritized features including collecting parent and child concerns and goals; symptom, side effect, and medication adherence tracking with decision support; and accessible educational materials. Iterative usability testing refined the system. MyAsthma provides a model for using technology to foster shared decision making in ambulatory care settings.

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Alexander G. Fiks

University of Pennsylvania

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Robert W. Grundmeier

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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James P. Guevara

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Michelle Ross

University of Pennsylvania

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Dean Karavite

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Andrew Suh

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Banita McCarn

American Academy of Pediatrics

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Elena DeBartolo

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Lihai Song

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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