Impact of a Nurse-led Virtual Asthma Education Program on Middle School-aged Children's Asthma Self-management


Book Description

Asthma is a leading chronic disease among school-aged children and adolescents. In one rural Maryland public school system, asthma accounts for many school health visits, missed school days, and emergency room (ER) visits, especially among middle schoolers. Learning asthma self-management techniques must become a priority to prevent poor health outcomes in this group. Currently in the school system, asthma self-management education is not provided to asthmatic adolescents. This Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) project sought to explore whether a school-based, nurse-led group asthma education program, called Kickin' Asthma, implemented virtually, could improve asthma symptoms, spacer use techniques, rescue inhaler needs, and frequency of ER visits among students with persistent asthma in grades 6 through 8 over three months. Current evidence suggests school-based asthma education may improve asthma knowledge and self-management abilities with resultant improved health outcomes among asthmatic adolescents. Despite limitations set forth by COVID-19, this project found school-based asthma education can improve asthma-related sleep disturbance (p




Evaluation of a School-based Program Targeting Pediatric Asthma Self-management Skills in an Urban Population


Book Description

Asthma is the most commonly diagnosed chronic disorder in childhood and is linked with several problematic outcomes including frequent school absences, increased hospitalizations and decreased quality of life. Further, urban populations struggling with low socioeconomic status are disproportionately represented in prevalence statistics and suffer from increased functional morbidity relative to other children with asthma. These findings exist in the midst of largely effective pharmacological interventions. Asthma self-management programs (SMPs) target several behaviors linked to improved outcomes and are often used as an adjunct to medication management. SMPs have been employed using a variety of techniques and treatment targets in a wide range of settings. Data suggests that SMPs have a mild to moderate impact on functional morbidity outcomes and merit further research. In order to facilitate efficacious interventions to those at highest risk of problematic outcomes, common barriers impinging on program attendance must be alleviated. The school setting proves to be an ideal location to deliver SMPs due to their accessibility and available resources. The current project evaluates a school-based asthma SMP delivered in an urban setting. Results reveal statistically significant increases in quality of life and child reported knowledge as well as decreased utilization of urgent care outpatient treatment. Trends towards decreased agreement between children and caregivers on allocation of asthma management tasks reflect challenges with implementation of programs in the absence of frequent parental contact. School-based asthma SMPs afford several benefits to high-risk populations but also must reflect the need for family involvement in successful asthma management.




A School-based Asthma Education Program to Reduce Absenteeism


Book Description

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), one in thirteen people have a diagnosis of asthma (2017). Childhood asthma is one of the leading chronic diseases affecting children below the age of eighteen years (CDC, 2017). Despite having medical advances and medications in the field of asthma, the disease remains the significant cause of school absenteeism. This study describes the planning, implementation, and results of a clinical scholarly project, which implemented a school-based asthma education program among middle school students' with a purpose to increase asthma control and reduce school absenteeism. The research design of this project was a pre- and post-intervention study and examined the effectiveness of the school-based program on the knowledge of managing asthma among the student adolescents. Attendance rates were also reviewed pre- and post-intervention. The data collection method, target population, sample size, instrumentation, variables, and the findings will be discussed. The paper also details the limitations of the project, the significance and implications, application to Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Essentials (American Association of Colleges of Nursing [AACN], 2006), sustainability and dissemination of the study findings.







Improving Childhood Asthma Outcomes in the United States


Book Description

One-liner: A set of policy recommendations to promote the development and maintenance of communities in which children with asthma can be swiftly diagnosed, effectively treated, and protected from exposure to harmful environmental factors. An estimated 5 million U.S. children have asthma. Too many of these children are unnecessarily impaired. Much of the money spent on asthma is for high-cost health care services to treat acute periods of illness. Many asthma attacks could be avoided--and much suffering prevented and many medical costs saved--if more children received good-quality, ongoing asthma care and if the 11 policy recommendations presented in this report were implemented in a oordinated fashion. A national call to action, the policy recommendations span public and private interests and compel integration of public health activities across local, state, and federal levels. This report summarizes the findings of an effort funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation as part of the Pediatric Asthma Initiative, whose purpose is to address current gaps in national childhood asthma care. It is the first national initiative that simultaneously addresses treatment, policy, and financing issues for children with asthma at the patient, provider, and institutional levels. The purpose of RAND's effort was to:--identify a range of policy actions in both the public and private sectors that could improve childhood asthma outcomes nationwide--select a subset of policies to create a blueprint for national policy in this area--outline alternatives to implement these policies that build on prior efforts.The effort developed a comprehensive policy framework that maps the identified strategies to one overall policy objective: to promote the development and maintenance of asthma-friendly communities--communities in which children with asthma are swiftly diagnosed, receive appropriate and ongoing treatment, and are not exposed to environmental factors that exacerbate their condition. This report is intended as a working guide for coordinating the activities of both public and private organizations at the federal, state, and local community levels.