Form Approved
OMB No. 0920-1129
Exp. Date 08/31/2019
Six-Month Follow-up Training Survey
A few months ago you participated in a training on fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. We would like your feedback on how useful the training has been in your practice with your patients/clients. The purpose of this survey is to understand the opinions and practices of health professionals around their patients’/clients’ alcohol use and on the prevention, identification, and treatment of fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. Your feedback is important as it will help assess the efficacy of trainings and identify the needs of health professionals to better address the services they provide to patients/clients around alcohol consumption.
This survey will take approximately 9 minutes to complete and your responses will be kept secure. Any information you provide will be presented in aggregate in a report and no individual identifying information will be included. Your participation in this survey is voluntary and you may decline to answer any question and you have the right to stop the survey at any time.
Thank you.
The anonymous linkage code below will be used to match data from different evaluation forms without using your name or information that can identify you.
Please complete the following items for your anonymous code:
First letter in mother’s first name: |___| First letter in father’s first name: |___|
First digit in your social security number: |___| Last digit in your social security number: |___|
What type of training did you attend?
Webinar series
FASD or SBI training
I include prevention of alcohol misuse when talking with my patients/clients or their caregivers.
Never
Rarely
Sometimes
Often
Always
Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders are: (Check only one response.)
Disorders a pregnant woman experiences when she drinks alcohol.
Disorders that affect the ability of a pregnant woman who drinks alcohol to go full term.
Physical disorders that affect a fetus when a pregnant woman drinks alcohol.
The range of effects that can occur in an individual who was exposed prenatally to alcohol.
Which of the following could indicate that a child may have been exposed to alcohol prenatally? (Check all that apply.)
Growth deficiencies
Clinically significant abnormalities and/or a history of seizures
Cognitive/developmental deficiencies or discrepancies
Executive function deficits
Delays in gross/fine motor function
Problems with self-regulation/self-soothing
Delayed adaptive skills
Confirmed history of alcohol exposure in utero
Don’t know/unsure
Risky drinking for non-pregnant women ages 21 and older is defined as more than _____ standard drinks in a day or more than _____ standard drinks per week on average:
2, 6
3, 7
3, 8
4, 7
Which of the following are the primary facial dysmorphic features associated with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome? (Check all that apply.)
Wide inner canthal distance
Short palpebral fissures
Full lips
Smooth philtrum
Thin upper lip
Flaring nares
Don’t know/unsure
What advice would you give your patient/client about how much alcohol is safe to drink during pregnancy? (Check only one response.)
One glass of wine per day
One light beer per day
One shot of hard alcohol per day
There is no known safe amount of alcohol consumption during pregnancy
When is it safe to drink alcohol during pregnancy? (Check only one response.)
During the first three months
During the last three months
Once in a while
Never
What is the most effective strategy to reduce fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs)? (Check only one response.)
Enact laws and other policy strategies that punish pregnant women for drinking alcohol.
Screen all women of child bearing age for alcohol use and provide intervention as appropriate.
Tell women who you think may have a drinking problem to get help.
Conduct health fairs and other educational events for new mothers that focus on binge drinking.
Rate the importance of providing counseling to your patients/clients on risky alcohol use in women of childbearing age:
Not at all important
Somewhat important
Moderately important
Very important
Extremely important
If you are a student, please skip to Question 11. Otherwise, please continue.
When do you (or someone in your practice) ask your patients/clients or their parents/caregivers about their alcohol use? (Check only one response.)
Never
Annually
At every visit
When indicated (please describe:__________)
Other, please specify____________
My practice has a consistent process to screen or obtain information from all patients/clients about their alcohol use. (Check only one response.)
Yes
No
Don’t Know
Not applicable to the patients/clients in my practice setting
If yes to Question 10, please continue. Otherwise, skip to Question 11.
What does initial patient/client screening for alcohol use consist of in your practice setting? (Check only one response.)
Informal questions (Do you drink? How often/much do you drink?, etc.).
Formal screening tool or evidence-based/ validated screening instrument (AUDIT, AUDIT-C, DAST, CAGE, CRAFFT, NIAAA Youth Alcohol Screen, etc.).
I don't know.
Who generally conducts the initial screening for alcohol? (Check all that apply.)
Nurse (including nurse practitioner)
Social worker
Behavioral health specialist (coach)
Psychologist
Physician
Physician’s Assistant
Medical Assistant
Other, please specify ____________________
Is screening for alcohol use followed by some type of intervention in your practice setting? (Check all that apply.)
No, there is no patient/client education or intervention done following the initial screening
Yes, all patients/clients are given educational materials/information on “safe” levels of alcohol and health risks associated with consuming too much alcohol
Yes, patients/clients who screen positive for risky alcohol use are asked follow-up questions and provided brief counseling.
Yes, patients/clients who screen positive for risky alcohol use are asked follow-up questions and provided with additional resources (e.g., a list of treatment and/or counseling services in the community).
Not sure if there is an intervention following the initial screening.
Who generally does the intervention in your practice setting? (Check all that apply.)
Nurse (including nurse practitioner)
Social worker
Behavioral health specialist (coach)
Psychologist
Physician
Physician’s Assistant
Medical Assistant
Other, please specify _________________
Does your practice bill for screening and brief intervention services? (Check only one response.)
Yes
No
Not sure
I have been able to convince at least one person in my profession of the importance of screening for alcohol use.
Yes
No
I have developed or changed at least one policy in my practice to focus on prevention, identification, or care/treatment for patients/clients who have or may have one of the FASDs.
Yes
No
In your current position, do you provide services to individuals who may have fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs)? (Check only one response.)
Yes
No
Not sure
On a scale from 1 to 5 where 1 means you strongly disagree with the statement and 5 means you strongly agree, to what extent do you disagree or agree with the following statements. (Select one number per row).
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On a scale from 1 to 5 where 1 means you are not confident in your skills and 5 means you are totally confident in your skills, how confident are you in your skills to do the following? (Select one number per row).
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The questions in this section are designed to explore the attitudes of staff working with people who drink alcohol. There are no right or wrong answers. On a scale of 1 to 5 where 1 means you are strongly disagree and 5 means you strongly agree, please indicate your response to the following statements.
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Strongly agree |
Agree |
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Strongly disagree |
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Has your practice experienced any of the following barriers to effective implementation of alcohol screening and brief intervention? (Check all that apply.).
No barriers; we screen and intervene consistently and well
Time limitations during patient visits
It is not required; lack of incentive
Attitudes of providers and/or staff about substance use/abuse
Workforce needs education and training on screening and brief intervention
Not easily accessible in the Electronic Health Record
Concerns about damaging rapport with patients/clients
Patient reluctance to be honest about alcohol use, or resistance to treatment
Concerns about confidentiality and reporting requirements (example: to social services agency)
Inadequate referral sources and/or system for making referrals
Billing for alcohol screening, assessment, and counseling/intervention is not in place
Patient/client inability to pay for treatment
Other (please specify) _______________________________________________
Is the practice setting in which you currently work the same as the practice setting in which you worked at the time you took the training?
Yes
No
Thank you for completing this survey.
CDC estimates the average public reporting burden for this collection of information as 9 minutes per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data/information sources, gathering and maintaining the data/information needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden to CDC/ATSDR Information Collection Review Office, 1600 Clifton Road NE, MS
D-74, Atlanta, Georgia 30333; ATTN: PRA (0920-1129).
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
File Title | FASD PIC AND NATIONAL PARTNER CROSS SITE EVALUATION |
Author | Rich Ann Baetz |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-02-11 |