Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
There is increasing demand for physicians in pediatric settings to address not only the physical but also the psychosocial health of their child and adolescent patients. Brief interventions (BIs) and in particular Motivational interviewing (MI) offer an efficient means of targeting behavioral developmental and social problems within the context of pediatric practice. This review addresses the patient-centered care foundation of and empirical support for brief pediatric interventions including educational and media-based interventions MI-based prevention and intervention with health risk behaviors procedural pain control and adherence to treatment recommendations. In addition developmental considerations and future directions for BI research in pediatric practice are summarized. (excerpt)
Erickson et al. (Thu,) studied this question.