| Literature DB >> 24767303 |
Monica Lakhanpaul1, Deborah Bird, Logan Manikam, Lorraine Culley, Gill Perkins, Nicky Hudson, Joanne Wilson, Mark Johnson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: South Asian children with asthma are less likely to receive prescriptions and more likely to suffer uncontrolled symptoms and acute asthma admissions compared with White British children. Understanding barriers are therefore vital in addressing health inequalities. We undertook a systematic review identifying explanatory factors for barriers and facilitators to asthma management in South Asian children. South Asians were defined as individuals of Indian, Pakistani or Bangladeshi descent.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24767303 PMCID: PMC4032170 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Study selection flow diagram.
Table of included studies
| Kuehni3 (UK) | Prevalence survey | 6080 children aged 1-4 | Possible under-treatment with steroids | NS | High response rate |
| Hazir15 (Pakistan) | Questionnaire based interview | 200 parents/carers of children with asthma aged 2–13; attended hospital asthma clinic between 3 m-7 y | Lack of understanding of medication use, food beliefs, social stigma & poor child self-esteem | Lack of awareness not significantly related to socioeconomic or educational background. Community strategies to raise awareness needed. | Pakistan is an ethically, culturally & socially diverse country. Hospital based study therefore may not reflect true situation in community. |
| Shivbalan16 (India) | Questionnaire survey | 100 children aged 2–15 with total >4 wheeze episodes, 2 wheeze episodes in the last 6 months with at least 2 ED visits and 1 hospitalisation. | Lack of knowledge and acceptance about asthma, poor understanding of aetiology & prognosis, misconceptions about long-term medications, social stigma & reliance on GPs for information | Awareness of triggers | No clear details on ethical approval or eligible/recruited numbers. Majority of participants from same socioeconomic status therefore may not be representative |
| Haque17 (Pakistan) | Questionnaire survey pre/post seminar | 82 GPs registered with the College of Family Medicine | Lack of knowledge by healthcare professionals | NS | Participants were GPs who voluntarily attended an educational programme & therefore results may be biased towards motivated GPs |
| Gautam18 (India) | Questionnaire survey | 157 GPs registered with the Delhi Medical Association | Knowledge gaps in different GPs. Includes diagnosis, misconceptions about food and exercise avoidance and parental smoking effects | NS | No clear inclusion/exclusion criteria & mention questionnaire validity. Non-respondent bias may be present–43 (21.5%) GPs refused. |
| Lai19 (India) | Questionnaire survey | 85 children with asthma ages 6–17 with minimum 2 years since symptom onset. | Poor physician-parent communication, social stigma, misconceptions about food avoidance & beliefs that modern medicines cause harm | Parents keen to learn & parental recognition of importance of treating asthma | No clear recruitment methodology & mention of questionnaire validity. Participants enrolled in asthma clinic so biased towards those receiving medical care. |
| Ormerod20 (UK) | Prevalence survey | 1783 adults and children with asthma aged 0–70 registered with participating GP practice | Asthma under-diagnosis with possible under-recognition & reporting | NS | No clear recruitment methodology and no sample size calculations. Findings reflect Blackburn GPs so may not be generalisable. |
| Duran-Tauleria21 (UK) | Questionnaire survey | 14490 children aged 5–11 with respiratory symptoms including asthma, wheeze & bronchitis66 | NS | Ethnic monitoring and targets for specific populations to monitor adherence to clinical guidelines & indicators to monitor inequalities in asthma treatment in minority ethnic communities | No clear sampling & recruitment methodology & no clear inclusion/exclusion criteria. |
| Cane22 (UK) | Focus groups | 66 mothers aged 22–45 from Bangladeshi, White or Black Caribbean backgrounds. | Different (sometimes inaccurate) understandings of asthma, use of alternative medications, delay in seeking Western medical help & stigma | NS | Study based on mothers’ perception of video of child with an asthma attack with lack of further content. Unclear analysis methodology. No data on socioeconomic or educational background collected. |
| Smeeton23 (UK) | Questionnaire survey | 150 parents of children with asthma aged 3-9 | Stigma, erroneous beliefs & choosing not to give medications | NS | Clear recruitment and sampling methodology with clear analysis. High proportion of SA participants born outside UK with low education level & therefore may impact results. |
| Singh24 (India) | Questionnaire survey | 1012 adults and children with asthma | Lack of knowledge about asthma, failure of recognising warning symptoms, beliefs in permanent cure, use of complementary medicine & treatment non-adherence | Children preferred inhalers whereas adults preferred oral medications | No data on questionnaire validity. No clear eligibility, inclusion & exclusion criteria. Use of numerous closed questions. Study and analysis included both adults and children. |
| Mittal25 (India) | Questionnaire survey | 52 child–parent pairs; children aged 6–15 diagnosed with asthma | Parent and child ability to perceive symptom severity (influenced by child’s age), cigarette smoke exposure and asthma severity | NS | Unclear reason of chosen sampling and recruitment method. |
| Michel26 (UK) | Questionnaire survey | 4236 children aged 6-10 | English as second language & deprivation | Higher maternal education. | Parents received three study questionnaires so may have had a learning effect. Low response rates of 52% of Whites & 40% of South Asians. |
| Panico27 (UK) | Cohort study | 14630 singleton infants aged 3 whose mothers participated in the survey | Language & maternal migration – suggests the lack of UK familiarity & language skills leads to underreporting of asthma | NS | Despite large study size small SA group samples (5%). Barriers are inferred. Children of mixed ethnicity classified according to the EM parent’s group and may lead to effect attenuation. |
| Carey28 (UK) | Prevalence survey | 847 children aged 8–11 with asthma, atopy or bronchial hyperreactivity | Western diet associated with more hyperreactivity | Asian diet appears protective | No data on questionnaire reliability and validity. |
NS = none specified.