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Dive into the research topics where Suzanne Boulter is active.

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Featured researches published by Suzanne Boulter.


Pediatrics | 2012

Computer-Facilitated Substance Use Screening and Brief Advice for Teens in Primary Care: An International Trial

Sion Kim Harris; Ladislav Csémy; Lon Sherritt; Olga Starostova; Shari Van Hook; Julie K. Johnson; Suzanne Boulter; Traci Brooks; Peggy Carey; Robert Kossack; John W. Kulig; Nancy Van Vranken; John R Knight

OBJECTIVE: Primary care providers need effective strategies for substance use screening and brief counseling of adolescents. We examined the effects of a new computer-facilitated screening and provider brief advice (cSBA) system. METHODS: We used a quasi-experimental, asynchronous study design in which each site served as its own control. From 2005 to 2008, 12- to 18-year-olds arriving for routine care at 9 medical offices in New England (n = 2096, 58% females) and 10 in Prague, Czech Republic (n = 589, 47% females) were recruited. Patients completed measurements only during the initial treatment-as-usual study phase. We then conducted 1-hour provider training, and initiated the cSBA phase. Before seeing the provider, all cSBA participants completed a computerized screen, and then viewed screening results, scientific information, and true-life stories illustrating substance use harms. Providers received screening results and “talking points” designed to prompt 2 to 3 minutes of brief advice. We examined alcohol and cannabis use, initiation, and cessation rates over the past 90 days at 3-month follow-up, and over the past 12 months at 12-month follow-up. RESULTS: Compared with treatment as usual, cSBA patients reported less alcohol use at follow-up in New England (3-month rates 15.5% vs 22.9%, adjusted relative risk ratio [aRRR] = 0.54, 95% confidence interval 0.38–0.77; 12-month rates 29.3% vs 37.5%, aRRR = 0.73, 0.57–0.92), and less cannabis use in Prague (3-month rates 5.5% vs 9.8%, aRRR = 0.37, 0.17–0.77; 12-month rates 17.0% vs 28.7%, aRRR = 0.47, 0.32–0.71). CONCLUSIONS: Computer-facilitated screening and provider brief advice appears promising for reducing substance use among adolescent primary care patients.


Pediatrics | 2014

Maintaining and Improving the Oral Health of Young Children

David Krol; Adriana Segura; Suzanne Boulter; Melinda Clark; Rani S. Gereige; Wendy E. Mouradian; Rocio B. Quinonez; Francisco Ramos-Gomez; Rebecca L. Slayton; Martha Ann Keels; Joseph Castellano; Sheila Strock; Lauren Barone

Oral health is an integral part of the overall health of children. Dental caries is a common and chronic disease process with significant short- and long-term consequences. The prevalence of dental caries for the youngest of children has not decreased over the past decade, despite improvements for older children. As health care professionals responsible for the overall health of children, pediatricians frequently confront morbidity associated with dental caries. Because the youngest children visit the pediatrician more often than they visit the dentist, it is important that pediatricians be knowledgeable about the disease process of dental caries, prevention of the disease, and interventions available to the pediatrician and the family to maintain and restore health.


Pediatrics | 2008

Perceptions of Oral Health Training and Attitudes Toward Performing Oral Health Screenings Among Graduating Pediatric Residents

Gretchen L. Caspary; David Krol; Suzanne Boulter; Martha Ann Keels; Giusy Romano-Clarke

BACKGROUND. There is a lack of access to oral health services for American children. Some propose that pediatricians be trained to deliver preventive screening and education to families until they access a dental home. However, little is known about the current oral health training provided during pediatric residency. OBJECTIVE. The purpose of this work was to evaluate the oral health training that pediatricians receive during residency and their attitudes toward performing basic oral health screenings. METHODS. The American Academy of Pediatrics Survey of Graduating Residents is an annual, randomly sampled national survey of graduating pediatric residents. The 2006 Survey of Graduating Residents surveyed 611 residents and examined their perception of their oral health training and their attitudes about performing oral health screenings. RESULTS. Thirty-five percent of residents received no oral health training during residency. Of those who did, 73% had <3 hours of training, and only 14% had clinical observation time with a dentist. Seventy-one percent felt that they had too little oral health training, and only 21% felt that their residency was very good or excellent in preparing them to perform oral health-risk assessments. Residents felt confident in their ability to offer anticipatory guidance but not to do the more technical oral health screenings. The majority of residents believed that pediatricians should conduct basic oral health screenings. Multiple regression analysis indicated that residents who received ≥3 hours of oral health training, who applied for jobs in the inner city, and whose career goal was to work in primary practice are those most likely to support this idea. CONCLUSIONS. Pediatric residents currently receive little training in oral health, and the majority wish for more. This study shows that oral health training during residency can increase pediatrician confidence in participating in important oral health promotion tasks, including anticipatory guidance, oral screenings, and oral health-risk assessment.


Pediatrics | 2010

Policy statement - Child fatality review

Cindy W. Christian; Robert D. Sege; Carole Jenny; James Crawford; Emalee G. Flaherty; Roberta A. Hibbard; Rich Kaplan; John Stirling; H. Garry Gardner; Carl R. Baum; Dennis R. Durbin; Beth E. Ebel; Richard Lichenstein; Mary Ann Limbos; Joseph O'Neil; Kyran P. Quinlan; Seth J. Scholer; Michael S. Turner; Deise C. Granado-Villar; Suzanne Boulter; Jeffrey M. Brown; Lance A. Chilton; William H. Cotton; Beverly Gaines; Thresia B. Gambon; Benjamin A. Gitterman; Peter A. Gorski; Murray L. Katcher; Colleen A. Kraft; Alice A. Kuo

Injury remains the leading cause of pediatric mortality and requires public health approaches to reduce preventable deaths. Child fatality review teams, first established to review suspicious child deaths involving abuse or neglect, have expanded toward a public health model of prevention of child fatality through systematic review of child deaths from birth through adolescence. Approximately half of all states report reviewing child deaths from all causes, and the process of fatality review has identified effective local and state prevention strategies for reducing child deaths. This expanded approach can be a powerful tool in understanding the epidemiology and preventability of child death locally, regionally, and nationally; improving accuracy of vital statistics data; and identifying public health and legislative strategies for reducing preventable child fatalities. The American Academy of Pediatrics supports the development of federal and state legislation to enhance the child fatality review process and recommends that pediatricians become involved in local and state child death reviews.


Pediatrics | 2014

Management of Dental Trauma in a Primary Care Setting

Martha Ann Keels; Adriana Segura; Suzanne Boulter; Melinda Clark; Rani S. Gereige; David Krol; Wendy E. Mouradian; Rocio B. Quinonez; Francisco Ramos-Gomez; Rebecca L. Slayton; Joseph Castellano; Sheila Strock; Lauren Barone

The American Academy of Pediatrics and its Section on Oral Health have developed this clinical report for pediatricians and primary care physicians regarding the diagnosis, evaluation, and management of dental trauma in children aged 1 to 21 years. This report was developed through a comprehensive search and analysis of the medical and dental literature and expert consensus. Guidelines published and updated by the International Association of Dental Traumatology (www.dentaltraumaguide.com) are an excellent resource for both dental and nondental health care providers.


Archive | 2012

Broader Considerations of Medical and Dental Data Integration

Stephen Foreman; Joseph Kilsdonk; Kelly Boggs; Wendy E. Mouradian; Suzanne Boulter; Paul S. Casamassimo; Valerie J. H. Powell; Beth Piraino; Wells Shoemaker; Jessica Kovarik; Evan L. Waxman; Biju Cheriyan; Henry Hood; Allan G. Farman; Matthew Holder; Miguel Humberto Torres-Urquidy; Amit Acharya; Andrea Mahnke; Po-Huang Chyou; Franklin M. Din; Steven J. Schrodi

Dental health insurance coverage in the United States is either nonexistent (Medicare and the uninsured), spotty (Medicaid) and limited (most employer-based private benefit plans). Perhaps as a result, dental health in the United States is not good. What public policy makers may not appreciate is that this may well be impacting medical care costs in a way that improved dental benefits would produce a substantial return to investment in expanded dental insurance coverage.


Academic Pediatrics | 2009

Oral Health and Pediatricians: Results of a National Survey

Charlotte W. Lewis; Suzanne Boulter; Martha Ann Keels; David Krol; Wendy E. Mouradian; Karen G. O'Connor; Rocio B. Quinonez


Academic Pediatrics | 2014

Oral Health Opinions and Practices of Pediatricians: Updated Results From a National Survey

Rocio B. Quinonez; Ashley M. Kranz; Charlotte W. Lewis; Lauren Barone; Suzanne Boulter; Karen G. O'Connor; Martha Ann Keels


International Journal of Dentistry | 2013

Chapter Oral Health Advocates: A Nationwide Model for Pediatrician Peer Education and Advocacy about Oral Health

Charlotte W. Lewis; Lauren Barone; Rocio B. Quinonez; Suzanne Boulter; Wendy E. Mouradian


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2009

A Youth-Provider Connectedness Measure For Use In Clinical Intervention Studies

Sion Kim Harris; Elizabeth R. Woods; Lon Sherritt; Shari Van Hook; Suzanne Boulter; Traci Brooks; Peggy Carey; Robert Kossack; John W. Kulig; John R Knight

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Rocio B. Quinonez

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Lauren Barone

American Academy of Pediatrics

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John R Knight

Boston Children's Hospital

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