| Literature DB >> 19515862 |
Meg Wise1, Alice Pulvermacher, Kathleen Kelly Shanovich, David H Gustafson, Christine Sorkness, Abhik Bhattacharya.
Abstract
Asthma case management and education programs improve pediatric asthma outcomes, but designing rigorous randomized controlled studies that accurately measure effects while encouraging parent participation is challenging. This is especially so for low-income African American families, who face significantly more severe asthma and social stress than their middle-class counterparts. Action research can help health education researchers negotiate between the elegant and complex designs favored by scientists with the real-life challenges of recruitment, implementation, and retention. This article discusses how a multidisciplinary team uses action research concepts to continuously adjust originally proposed protocols through the planning and implementation phases to encourage participation in a year-long randomized controlled trial of a program that combines telephone asthma case management and comprehensive online asthma education. As a result of these efforts, a higher proportion of low-income African American families are recruited into the study than originally proposed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19515862 PMCID: PMC3319110 DOI: 10.1177/1524839909334621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Promot Pract ISSN: 1524-8399