| Literature DB >> 22272780 |
Mary R Janevic1, Georgiana M Sanders, Lara J Thomas, Darla M Williams, Belinda Nelson, Emma Gilchrist, Timothy R B Johnson, Noreen M Clark.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Among adults in the United States, asthma prevalence is disproportionately high among African American women; this group also experiences the highest levels of asthma-linked mortality and asthma-related health care utilization. Factors linked to biological sex (e.g., hormonal fluctuations), gender roles (e.g., exposure to certain triggers) and race (e.g., inadequate access to care) all contribute to the excess asthma burden in this group, and also shape the context within which African American women manage their condition. No prior interventions for improving asthma self-management have specifically targeted this vulnerable group of asthma patients. The current study aims to evaluate the efficacy of a culturally- and gender-relevant asthma-management intervention among African American women. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22272780 PMCID: PMC3317437 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-76
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Examples of culturally-relevant aspects of the Women of Color and Asthma Control intervention
| Program element | Relevance |
|---|---|
| Program staff | Intervention counselors are African-American women, to enhance rapport with participants. Non-counseling staff are trained in issues related to cultural sensitivity. |
| Participant visuals | Photographs in workbook represent a diversity of African American women and families. Photos of telephone counselors included in workbook. |
| Workbook content | Use of culturally-relevant activities when discussing potential triggers (e.g., nail salons, church and family gatherings). Use of culturally-relevant examples in list of potential asthma-management problems (e.g., asthma medicine is expensive so I only buy it when my symptoms are bad, my family thinks prayer is all I need to take care of my asthma). |
| Telephone session content | Culturally-linked factors addressed by telephone counselors during program sessions, where relevant: |
Women of Color and Asthma Control intervention: Overview of program session content
| Session | Examples of topics, and self-regulation phases addressed: | Goals for participant | Other content |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Use of peak flow meter (PFM); tracking symptoms, medications and triggers; allergies. | Self-observe using asthma diary (mail copy of diary data back to health educator). | |
| 2 | Review PFM and symptom diary. | Use review to identify symptom patterns and triggers. Continue self-observation. | |
| 3 | Review PFM and symptom diary; review therapeutic plan provided by physician. Identify a management goal and develop plan to achieve goal. | Develop a plan for addressing the problem area and reaching goal. Carry out steps of the management plan. | Discussions of sex-, gender- and culture-related influences on asthma and asthma management are integrated into each session. |
| 4 | Review progress toward goal and adjust plan as needed. | Assess progress, fine-tune plan, and continue toward problem resolution. | |
| 5 | Review progress toward goal and consider next steps (e.g., refine plan, choose new problem, etc.). Discuss reward and benchmarks of progress. | Achieve goal as appropriate, apply problem solving process to new/different management problems. | |