| Literature DB >> 18803842 |
Ruchi S Gupta1, Jennifer S Kim, Julia A Barnathan, Laura B Amsden, Lakshmi S Tummala, Jane L Holl.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Food allergy prevalence is increasing in US children. Presently, the primary means of preventing potentially fatal reactions are avoidance of allergens, prompt recognition of food allergy reactions, and knowledge about food allergy reaction treatments. Focus groups were held as a preliminary step in the development of validated survey instruments to assess food allergy knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs of parents, physicians, and the general public.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18803842 PMCID: PMC2564918 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-8-36
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Sample focus group questions by domain.
| Domain | Parent Focus Groups | Physician Focus Groups | General Public Focus Groups |
| Definition & Diagnosis | ▪ In your own words, tell us what a food is. | ▪ How do you define anaphylaxis? | ▪ What does it mean to you when you hear someone is allergic to a food? |
| ▪ How is a food allergy diagnosed? | ▪ How do you make a diagnosis of food allergy? What tests do you use? | ▪ How does a doctor decide a child has a food allergy? | |
| Symptoms & Severity | ▪ What are the signs that make you think your child has a food allergy? | ▪ What signs and symptoms alert you to a possible diagnosis of food allergy? | ▪ What happens when someone has an allergic reaction to a food? |
| ▪ How sick can a child become when they are having an allergic reaction? | ▪ Does anaphylaxis require respiratory, laryngeal, or gastrointestinal symptoms? | ▪ How sick can someone with a food allergy can be? Could he/she die? | |
| Triggers & Environmental Risk | ▪ What do you think causes food allergy (environmental factors, genetics, dietary factors)? | ▪ What are the risk factors for development of food allergy (environmental factors, genetics, dietary factors)? | ▪ Can your child catch a food allergy? |
| ▪ Do you think what the mother ate during her pregnancy makes a difference in whether a child has a food allergy? | ▪ What are some co-morbidities associated with food allergy? | ▪ Do food allergies run in families? | |
| Perceptions of Susceptibility & Prevalence | ▪ How common is food allergy? | ▪ To what foods are children most commonly allergic? | ▪ In a group of 100 children, about how many of them do you think would have a food allergy? |
| ▪ To what foods are children most commonly allergic? | ▪ Does the prevalence of food allergy vary by race, ethnicity, or socioeconomic status? | ▪ To what foods are people most often allergic? | |
| Stigma & Acceptability | ▪ Do you feel like you have to explain your child's allergy to friends and family? How well do they accept this? | ▪ What kinds of difficulties might children with food allergy and their parents face in school, at home, between parent and child, etc.? | ▪ What would you think if your friend told you that his/her child had a food allergy? |
| Perceptions of Quality of Life | ▪ How does having a child with food allergy affect your family and social life? | ▪ What are some personal and social issues for the children and families with food allergy? | ▪ How hard do you think it is to care for a child with food allergy? |
| Treatment & Utilization of Healthcare | ▪ What are the main ways food allergies are treated? | ▪ How can food allergy be prevented? | ▪ Do you think food allergy can be treated so that it will go away? |
| ▪ How difficult is it for you to follow the doctor's instructions? | ▪ What are the key treatments for food allergy? | ▪ How do you treat people with food allergy? | |
| Policy Issues | ▪ What public policies would help families with children with a food allergy? | ▪ What public policies would help families with children with a food allergy? | ▪ What laws could help families of children with food allergy? |
Parent focus groups: quotations from mothers (M) and fathers (F) of children with food allergy arranged by domain.
| Domain: Perceptions of Quality of Life | |
| Emotional Response | ▪ (M): "One of my sons has had two anaphylactic reactions, and it never leaves you. You cannot ever forget. It's like a broken record.....just the feverishness, and this helplessness, horrible helplessness feeling you cannot describe. It is such a gut-wrenching squeezing of your body when you see your child going through that." |
| ▪ (F): "You are so fearful of anaphylaxis and death. It is this kind of unknowing, this uncertainty of what degree of reaction it's going to be, and this constant [feeling]." | |
| Impact on Relationships | ▪ (M): "You do find that [in] every relationship you have to address the allergy issues. So you are always talking about it because there is always something that can come up." |
| ▪ (F): "I would say from my family's standpoint it was very difficult at first for them to understand, and in fact their tendency was to say, 'Well, you are just being neurotic and overprotective, and it is really not an issue'. And frankly, it was almost that they did not want to be inconvenienced by our situation. Therefore it was easy for them to discount it and say that [we as] the parents [were] being overprotective." | |
| Effect on Daily Social Life | ▪ (M): " [Food allergy] affects every aspect [of your life] from where you take a vacation to whether and where you go out for dinner to play dates, which we certainly cannot do on the spur of the moment sort of basis as many [other] families can do. It affects literally every aspect of our social life." |
| ▪ (F): "Going to parties, going to restaurants, having people over, any social contact that involves food becomes very distracting. [You] always kind of have to make sure that they [food-allergic child] are not eating anything that they have not asked you about." | |
| Effect on Marriage | ▪ (F): "My wife is much more into 100% prevention all the time and I am much more into trying to maximize what my son can do. [I am] trying to figure out what that limit is so he can do the most he could possibly do where [as] she is much more in tune to 'Let's not take a chance at all' and 'I do not want put my son in danger."' |
| ▪ (F): "I think we experience stress in different ways, but I think the fundamental difference is that she [the child's mother] feels the day to day responsibility [due to] the fact that she is there, and she is making those decisions. [Food allergy] is [the] one area in our marriage that [arguments] come up because I do not think I am as aware of the amount of stress that it creates for her." | |
| ▪ (M): "Milk and cheesy things are favorite [s] of [my husband's], and he is not going to give it up. [He is] not going to give it up regardless if it is life threatening to our child. So [milk] is in the house, and I follow him around and clean up. It has caused a huge marital strain." | |
| Domain: Definition & Diagnosis | |
| Diagnosis | ▪ (M): "It literally took six physicians before one said, 'Let's see if maybe this [eczema] is food-related with your daughter.' [There were] six [physicians] before someone thought that [food allergy] may be a possibility, and then when we went back to our dermatologist, we were basically told that it was just a lucky coincidence that when the dairy was [removed from her diet], the eczema went away too. I do not think that the doctor was being ignorant. I think that perhaps the doctor just did not know that this was even a possibility because of her training." |
| ▪ (M): "I think there was a time [when] food allergies were a rare thing, and I think pediatricians did not have the same level of concerns for it, just [like when] childhood diabetes was a rare thing. I think there is a bit of a lag, and a need for the medical community, especially pediatricians, to step up in terms of their level of understanding of the prevalence of this illness." | |
Physician focus groups: quotations from pediatricians (Ped) and family practitioners (FP) arranged by domain.
| ▪ (Ped): "A sudden distressing feeling that is difficulty breathing, possibly associated with swollen tongue and rapid heart rate [and] drop in blood pressure." | |
| ▪ (FP): "A life threatening reaction to some offending agent..." | |
| ▪ (FP): "including impending circulatory collapse" | |
| ▪ (FP): "Peanuts...like nuts. What comes after that, I guess milk...wheat." | |
| ▪ (FP): "Fish. Strawberries are fairly common too I think." | |
| ▪ (Ped): "...shellfish, eggs, wheat, soy." | |
| ▪ (Ped): "Tomatoes." | |
| ▪ (Ped): "I really do not know.... I have no concept of what percent outgrow [food allergy]" | |
| ▪ (FP): "One would think that [food allergies] are [more] prevalent the older you get because you [would] have more chance [s] to develop more allergies." | |
| ▪ (Ped): "So far all my milk protein allergy victims that have reached the age of two today have in fact outgrown the milk protein allergy." | |
| ▪ (Ped): "Generally [if] there is a family history of peanut allergy, I suggest they wait [to introduce peanut] until three [years]. Then if there is no family history, [I suggest they wait] until two [years]." | |
| ▪ (FP): "I do not think I have ever specifically given anticipatory guidance about [when to introduce] peanuts." | |
| ▪ | |
| ▪ | |
| ▪ (Ped): "I do not ever treat eczema as food-related. It may be. It may not be. I never took it serious [ly] enough to react that way. Treat it [with] a little basic hydrocortisone or emollients. It gets better and move on." | |
| ▪ (FP): "I actually kind of find out about a food allergy at the back end of an investigation for maybe persistent asthma or a persistent dermatological condition [rather] than discovering [food allergy] by testing. That has been my experience." | |
| ▪ (Ped): "I have seen some fish allergies, and [allergies to] tree nuts. I am not sure how seriously to take them. I have one family that believes that their child has a citrus allergy despite the fact that I have told them it is probably just a response to the acid in the citrus, but they have self-diagnosed [this allergy]." | |
| ▪ (FP): " [When making a diagnosis, I rely on] a parent telling me that there is some kind of skin breakout after eating something." | |
General public focus groups: quotations from higher (H) and lower (L) income participants arranged by domain.
| ▪ (H): "I think that [food allergy] may have something to do with the compromised immune system. There are a lot of factors that can affect your immune system that could be hereditary, but [food allergy] could also be due to environmental factors or conditions at birth or early illness or something that leaves the immune system in a weakened state or perhaps in a state where it is malfunctioning." | |
| ▪ (L): " [Food allergy is when] enzymes aggravate the nerves inside [and] stimulates pain to the brain." | |
| ▪ (H): "My husband was allergic to fish, and his brother was allergic to nuts, and they did not pay any attention to [avoiding] them and they outgrew [their allergies]." | |
| ▪ (L): "If you can find out what the [im]balance is in the system, I believe it could be corrected. I do not know about the shellfish [allergy] though because that is roughest [allergic reaction] I [have] ever seen." | |
| ▪ (H): "I think of it as not just a skin reaction but sometimes [of] a throat closing." | |
| ▪ (L): "I think that [symptoms would include] itching, swelling definitely, [and] even throwing up." | |
| ▪ (H): "I believe that perhaps my son's ADD [attention deficit disorder] is linked to food allergies." | |
| ▪ (L): "I think I am suspecting that I might have an allergy to pineapples. I have never been diagnosed with them, but I get itching and the swelling of the tongue and a really bad headache every time I eat fresh pineapple, but I can drink pineapple juice." | |
| ▪ (L): "I think that sometimes allergies come through the system like your mother is allergic to something; sometimes the children are allergic to it too." | |
| ▪ (H): "My kids had nuts, strawberries, everything [to eat]. I have no history of food allergies, and neither does my ex-husband. I exposed my kids to whatever they wanted to eat when they were very young, and hence I have two non-picky eaters. They will eat anything, and they are not allergic to anything." | |
| ▪ | |
| (H): "I really think that every single person has an allergy that they do not know about." | |
| (H): "I was thinking more like 20%." | |
| (L): "I am going to say 50%." | |
| ▪ (H): "I used to be in advertising [and] I know that Southwest's slogan is 'Fly for peanuts.' I just cannot believe that [in] this day and age that they [could] be in such a confined area 35,000 feet from any hospital [and] serve peanuts. I think it is crazy." | |
| ▪ (H): "Unless they make a specific announcement, 'We have a highly allergic passenger on board [an airplane],' no one is going to think twice about opening whatever it is they have. So the responsibility lies on the parent or the child as they become older, and [they should] take on the responsibility to let other people know." | |
| ▪ (H): "One of my daughter's friends is allergic to nuts, and I have to be very careful when we have her over for a play date." | |