Evaluating the Impact of a Safe Medication Storage Device
- Conditions
- Safety IssuesAccidents InjuryPoisoning
- Interventions
- Other: Medication LockboxBehavioral: Education
- Registration Number
- NCT04729894
- Lead Sponsor
- Binghamton University
- Brief Summary
Despite the initial success of the 1970s Poison Prevention Packaging Act, the incidence of pediatric medication poisonings in the United States remains high. Unintentional pediatric medication ingestions result in significant morbidity and are associated with substantial healthcare use and costs. A majority of these medication poisonings involve a caregivers' medication and are caused by modifiable unsafe storage behaviors. A better understanding of factors associated with pediatric poisonings and safe medication storage behaviors is needed to inform public health policy and develop targeted educational interventions. Furthermore, low-cost, scalable interventions that improve medication storage behaviors and reduce pediatric poisonings are necessary to address this ongoing preventable public health crisis.
In preliminary experiments, a baseline evaluation of caregivers demonstrated that they are unlikely to have a locked medication storage device in their home, but would be willing to use a locked device if one was available. Additionally, a follow-up assessment indicated that a majority of caregivers had used their medication over a one-month period. The latter feasibility assessment supports both caregiver willingness to use a safe storage device and demonstrates that a storage device can improve medication storage behaviors in the short-term.
Given these findings, we hypothesize that pediatric medication poisonings are due to improper storage, that medication storage behaviors are influenced by demographic and household specific factors, and that medication lockboxes improve safe medication storage behaviors and reduce pediatric poisonings. These hypotheses will be evaluated using the studies in the following Specific Aims: (1) to identify factors associated with pediatric poisonings, (2) to identify factors associated with medication storage behaviors, (3) to evaluate the effect of lockboxes on storage behaviors and pediatric poisonings.
Should this exploratory study reveal factors associated with increased risk for pediatric poisoning or with safe medication storage, and should safe medication storage interventions improve modifiable storage behaviors or show a reduction in pediatric poisonings, the results will be used to inform targeted public health campaigns and to develop a low-cost, scalable national program for improving safe medication storage and reducing pediatric poisonings.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 1000
- Primary caregivers of pediatric patients less than 6 years of age presenting to the emergency department
- Adults (at least 18 years of age) who are responsible for supervising at least one child under the age of 6 years in their residence
- Supervision of at least one child under the age of 6 years for at least 3.5 days per week on average
- pediatric patients who are critically ill or unstable
- pediatric patients presenting due to a poisoning related incident
- caregivers who are unable or unwilling to provide consent
- caregivers who are non-English speaking.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Safe Medication Storage Device + Education Medication Lockbox - Education Education - Safe Medication Storage Device + Education Education -
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Medication Storage Behaviors 1 year Participants will be evaluated at regular intervals over a one year period to evaluate the impact of a medication box + education, compared to education alone, on their short and long-term medication storage behaviors. These storage behaviors include storage location in the home, storage device(s), storage location height, co-storage with non-medication items, and alternative storage locations.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Pediatric Poisonings 1 year The rate of pediatric poisonings will be evaluated within each group and compared.
Medication Adherence 1 year Household medication adherence will be evaluated within each group and compared. Adherence will be measured using the validated eight-item Morisky Medication Adherence Scale (MMAS-8).