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CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

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Page 1: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

CONFIDENTIALITYLEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Page 2: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Overview

Why is confidentiality important? Laws in Washington Tips of how to start a visit Example cases Final Questions

Page 3: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Why is Confidentiality Important? Building trust is

key This can take time To build on trust,

the teen has to return to see you

Not all teens come from supportive environments

Page 4: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

What Does Research Show?

Having a confidential visit is important to teens

They are more likely to disclose risky behaviors if it’s confidential

They’re also more likely to return for care

Ford, C., Millstein, S., Halpern-Felsher, B., & Irwin, C. (1997). Influence of physician confidentiality assurances on adolescents' willingness to disclose information and seek future health care. A randomized controlled trial. JAMA , 1029-1034.

Page 5: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

What are Barriers?

Providers list ‘time constraints’ as a major barrier to providing confidential care

Parents may also be unwilling to allow a confidential visit (but this is not the norm!)

Helitzer, D. L., Sussman, A. L., Urquieta de Hernandez, B., & Kong, A. S. (2011). The "ins" and "outs" of provider-parent

communication: perspectives from adolescent primary care providers on challenges to forging alliances to reduce adolescent

risk. Journal of Adolescent Health , 404-409.

Page 6: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Age of Consent in WA

In WA state youth of special ages can seek care for certain things without a parent Mental Health treatment: 13 years Alcohol and drug treatment: 13 years Sexually transmitted disease/HIV testing:

14 years Reproductive health: no age limit

Page 7: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Tips on Confidentiality

Reassure the teen that the conversation is confidential unless they tell you someone is hurting them or they want to hurt someone (including self). WA state law: 13+ for mental health, 14+

for reproductive health

Ask your questions confidently, without passing any judgment.

Ask the same questions of everyone, regardless of gender! Example, “Are you sexually active with

boys, girls, or both?” Don’t forget to ask about any unwanted

intimate contact

Page 8: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Cases

Page 9: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Sarah

Sarah is a 17 y/o female coming in for a nutrition visit because she is underweight

Her mom and dad are here with her You tell them you’ll have a time during

the visit to meet with Sarah alone When parents step out, you let her know

you’ll have to tell her parents if you’re worried about her safety

Page 10: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Sarah

After learning a bit about her social life, she discloses she’s been restricting her intake, binge eating and purging

With more questioning, Sarah meets criteria for bulimia

She DOES NOT want to disclose to parentsWhat do you do with mom and dad?

Do you think she would have told you her eating habits if you hadn’t asked for the time without

family?

Page 11: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Ron

Ron is a 15 y/o male who is brought in by his mom for concerns about anger

You talk with them together, then ask mom to step out for a few minutes

You tell Ron the visit can remain confidential unless worried about his safety

Page 12: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Ron

He is hesitant to talk with you, but let’s you know he has a girlfriend

They have been sexually active but his parents don’t know and he’d like to keep it that way

You counsel about safer sex practices and sexually transmitted disease screening

What do you tell mom? Are you concerned about ordering the screening tests?

Page 13: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

DJ

DJ is a 14 y/o male who comes in for concerns of depression

He is here with his mom and stepfather

You talk with him alone and let him know the visit will remain confidential unless you’re worried about his safety

Page 14: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

DJ

DJ opens up about the bullying that is occurring at school and online

He also tells you he is questioning his sexuality, but has not told his parents

At the end of the visit, DJ discloses that a cousin in a different state touched him inappropriately a few years ago and he has never told anyone

Page 15: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

DJ

DJ gives you a lot of information including the name of the cousin and location of the incident

He also tells you he has thought of suicide in the past week

Now what do you do?

Page 16: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Maria

Maria is a 15 y/o female comes to clinic for heavy menstrual bleeding

She comes in with her entire family (mom, brothers, dad) for each visit

You always offer to meet with her alone, but she declines each time

Page 17: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Maria

Maria ran out of her birth control pills about a month ago, so she comes in for a refill

You offer to speak with her alone and she accepts

She denies sexual activity, drug use, alcohol use

Because she’s been out of pills for a month, a urine HCG is obtained and it is positive

Page 18: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Maria

Her family is waiting outside for her She continues to deny sexual activity but

you counsel her on options for the pregnancy

She leaves without making any decisions

Do you have to notify her parents? What about her PCP?

Page 19: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

What Cases do you have?

Does anyone in the audience have a case to discuss?

Page 20: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Summary

Confidentiality laws vary by state! In WA, minors can receive confidential

care for certain situations (mental health, substance use, STD screening, reproductive health)

Assuring confidentiality is important to teens, but let them know there are certain things you’ll have to disclose

Page 21: CONFIDENTIALITY LEAH Lecture by Yolanda Evans MD MPH

Questions?