A pilot study to enhance preventive asthma care among urban adolescents with asthma

Jill S Halterman, Kristin Riekert, Alison Bayer, Maria Fagnano, Paul Tremblay, Susan Blaakman, Belinda Borrelli, Jill S Halterman, Kristin Riekert, Alison Bayer, Maria Fagnano, Paul Tremblay, Susan Blaakman, Belinda Borrelli

Abstract

Background: Low-income, minority teens have disproportionately high rates of asthma morbidity and are at high risk for nonadherence to preventive medications.

Objective: To assess the feasibility and preliminary effectiveness of an innovative school-based asthma program to enhance the delivery of preventive care for 12-15 year olds with persistent asthma. We hypothesized that this intervention would (1) be feasible and acceptable among this population and (2) yield reduced asthma morbidity.

Subjects/setting: Teens with persistent asthma and a current preventive medication prescription in Rochester, NY.

Design: Single group pre-post pilot study during the 2009-2010 school year.

Intervention: Teens visited the school nurse daily for 6-8 weeks at the start of the school year to receive directly observed therapy (DOT) of preventive asthma medications; 2-4 weeks following DOT initiation, they received three counseling sessions (one in-home and two via telephone) using motivational interviewing (MI) to explore attitudes about asthma management, build motivation for medication adherence, and support transition to independent preventive medication use.

Primary outcome: Number of symptom-free days (SFDs)/2 weeks; outcome data were collected 2 months after baseline and at the end of school year.

Results: We enrolled 30 teens; 28 participated in the intervention. All teens initiated a trial of school-based DOT. All in-home MI visits were completed successfully, and 89% completed both follow-up sessions. Teens experienced an overall reduction of symptoms with more SFDs/2 weeks from baseline to 2-month and final (end of school year) assessments (8.71 vs. 10.79 vs. 12.89, respectively, p = .046 and p = .004). Teens also reported fewer days with symptoms, less activity limitation, and less rescue medication use (all p < .05). Exhaled nitric oxide levels decreased (p = .012), suggesting less airway inflammation. At the final assessment, teens reported significantly higher motivation to take their preventive medication every day (p = .043). At the end of the study, 79% of teens stated that they were better at managing asthma on their own, and 93% said they would participate in a similar program again.

Conclusions: This pilot study provides preliminary evidence of the feasibility and effectiveness of a novel school-based intervention to promote independence in asthma management and improve asthma outcomes in urban teens.

Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

Source: PubMed

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