A Multifaceted Prompting Intervention for Urban Children With Asthma
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Asthma |
Therapuetic Areas: | Pulmonary / Respiratory Diseases |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 2 - 12 |
Updated: | 4/21/2016 |
Start Date: | October 2008 |
End Date: | December 2015 |
The overall goal of this project is to evaluate whether a multifaceted prompting
intervention, administered in the urban primary care office setting, reduces morbidity among
urban children with asthma. This study builds on our experience with a pilot study in two
urban continuity clinics, in which we found that prompting clinicians about asthma severity
and care guidelines at the time of an office visit resulted in improved preventive care
delivery to inner-city children. This type of prompting program has the potential to
substantially improve care for impoverished children with asthma, and we propose to
establish: 1) whether these findings can be replicated in a similar study including a larger
sample of urban children from different types of practices, and 2) whether the positive
effects can be enhanced by more specific prompting directed towards both the provider and
the caregiver and by providing practice-level supports and feedback. We hypothesize that
children receiving a multifaceted prompting intervention (MPI) will experience less
asthma-related morbidity (defined by symptom-free days at the 2-month follow-up) compared to
children receiving usual care. Our secondary hypothesis is that children receiving the MPI
will receive improved preventive asthma care (defined by guideline-based corrective actions
taken at the index visit) compared to children receiving usual care.
intervention, administered in the urban primary care office setting, reduces morbidity among
urban children with asthma. This study builds on our experience with a pilot study in two
urban continuity clinics, in which we found that prompting clinicians about asthma severity
and care guidelines at the time of an office visit resulted in improved preventive care
delivery to inner-city children. This type of prompting program has the potential to
substantially improve care for impoverished children with asthma, and we propose to
establish: 1) whether these findings can be replicated in a similar study including a larger
sample of urban children from different types of practices, and 2) whether the positive
effects can be enhanced by more specific prompting directed towards both the provider and
the caregiver and by providing practice-level supports and feedback. We hypothesize that
children receiving a multifaceted prompting intervention (MPI) will experience less
asthma-related morbidity (defined by symptom-free days at the 2-month follow-up) compared to
children receiving usual care. Our secondary hypothesis is that children receiving the MPI
will receive improved preventive asthma care (defined by guideline-based corrective actions
taken at the index visit) compared to children receiving usual care.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Physician-diagnosed asthma
- Mild persistent or more severe asthma severity, or poor asthma control
- Age >2 and <12 years.
- Parent or caregiver must give permission to the study, and children >7 will must
provide assent.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Inability to speak and understand English or Spanish
- No access to a working phone for follow-up surveys
- The child having other significant medical conditions,
- Children in foster care or other situations in which consent cannot be obtained from
a guardian.
- Prior enrollment in the study.
- Child will not be seen by a physician or nurse practitioner during their visit
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