| Literature DB >> 30214248 |
Guadalupe Salazar1, Geeta Tarwala1, Marina Reznik1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases of childhood affecting 6.2 million (8.4%) children (<18 years old) in the USA. Asthma is also a leading cause of school absenteeism. Daily administration of preventive asthma medications improves asthma control. However, poor medication adherence is one of the barriers in achieving improved asthma outcomes. School-based supervised asthma therapy programs have been implemented to address this barrier.Entities:
Keywords: children; directly observed therapy; inhaled corticosteroids; interventions; medication adherence; schools
Year: 2018 PMID: 30214248 PMCID: PMC6121747 DOI: 10.2147/JAA.S147524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Asthma Allergy ISSN: 1178-6965
Figure 1Results of the literature review using the PubMed and Cochrane databases.
Study characteristics and intervention components
| Study | Study design | Sample size | US study location | Population and demographics | Intervention components |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Halterman et al, | RCT | 184 | Rochester,NY | African-American (59%) | School-based care group was provided with 2 metered dose inhalers of fluticasone propionate and a spacer, and children in this group received a single dose (2 puffs) of fluticasone propionate each school day, administered by the school nurse. The second inhaler was given to the family to administer at home, when the child was not in school. |
| Millard et al, | RCT | 50 | Dallas, TX | African-American communities | Children were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 arms: 1) school-based delivery of inhaled steroids, 2) home-based delivery of inhaled steroids, 3) home-based delivery of inhaled steroids with school-based asthma education, and 4) control group with no change in current therapy. Students in the treatment arms received beclomethasone twice a day, either at school (upon arrival and before leaving) or at home. |
| Gerald et al, | RCT | 290 | Birmingham, AL | African-American (91%) | Children were prescribed and provided with budesonide once daily to facilitate adherence. For children randomized to the supervised therapy arm, use of ICSs was supervised by study staff at school each day. If a child was observed using their inhaler incorrectly, staff provided education with the aid of a placebo inhaler. Children were also provided with an AAP and 2 peak flow meters (for home and school). |
| Halterman et al, | RCT | 530 | Rochester, NY | African-American (63%) | Single dose of fluticasone was administered by school nurses, with dose adjustment based on NHLBI guidelines to the treatment group. A home-based environmental tobacco smoke reduction program for smoke-exposed children in treatment group was provided as well, using motivational interviewing. |
| Halterman et al, | Pilot, pre- and-post | 30 | Rochester, NY | African-American (53%) | Teens were provided with a start-up preventive inhaler as authorized and prescribed by their physician. A second inhaler was delivered to the school nurse for single-dose DOT of preventive medication. Teens also received 3 MI counseling sessions (1 in-home and 2 via telephone) exploring attitudes about asthma management, building motivation for medication adherence, and supporting transition to independent preventive medication use. |
| Halterman et al, | Pilot, RCT | 100 | Rochester, NY | African-American (57%) | DOT of preventive asthma medications in school was facilitated by web-based technology. Web-based technology was also used for systematic symptom screening, electronic report generation, and medication authorization from providers. One dose of medication was given at school during the school day (if more frequent dosing was needed, additional doses were taken at home). |
| Trivedi et al, | Retrospective | 84 | Central Massachusetts | African-American (19%) | Providers determined medication dosing (once vs twice daily dosing) based on each child’s requirement. All children in the program started the school day by going to the school nurse office for supervised preventive asthma medication/ICS. For a child receiving twice-daily dosing at school, the nurse would administer the second dose at the end of the school day. |
| Harrington et al, | Pilot, RCT | 48 | Washington, DC | African-American (I: 95%) (C: 88%) | Clinician in clinic provided a specific order for the school nurse to administer ICS every day that school was in session, and prescribed ICS for administration at home every evening on school days and every morning and evening on weekends and holidays. |
| Halterman et al, | RCT | 400 | Rochester, NY | African-American (58%) | Supervised administration of preventive asthma medication at school as well as 3 school-based telemedicine visits to ensure appropriate assessment, preventive medication prescription, and follow-up care was done in intervention group. Most children received once-daily dosing to allow for medication administration during school hours but if more frequent dosing was needed, additional doses were given at home. |
Abbreviations: RCT, randomized controlled trial; ICS, inhaled corticosteroids; AAP, asthma action plan; NHLBI, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; DOT, directly observed therapy; MI, motivational interviewing; C, control; I, intervention.
Recruitment characteristics and study outcomes
| Study | Recruitment location | Intervention duration | Setting | Age group | Study outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Halterman et al, | School | 1 school year for 2 consecutive school years | 54 schools and preschools | 3–7 years old | |
| Millard et al, | School | 14 weeks | 8 elementary schools | 5–12 years old; mean age: 8.44 years | |
| Gerald et al, | School, physician office, health department | 15 months | 36 elementary schools | Mean age: 11 years | |
| Halterman et al, | School | 1 school year for 3 consecutive school years | 67 elementary and preschools | 3–10 years old; mean age: 7.1 years | |
| Halterman et al, | School | 6–8 weeks | Rochester City School District | 12–15 years old; mean age: 13.6 years | |
| Halterman et al, | School | 1 school year | 19 elementary and preschools | 3–10 years old; mean age: 7.2 years | |
| Trivedi et al, | Clinic | 1 year prior to enrollment and 1 year after enrollment | Grades 1–12, public schools | 6–18 years old; mean age: 10.5 years | |
| Harrington et al, | Clinic | 60 days | 18 public and public charter schools (K-8) | Mean age: 8.21 years | |
| Halterman et al, | School | 1 school year for 4 consecutive school years | 49 elementary schools | 3–10 years old; mean age: 7.8 years |
Notes:
N = the number of subjects who completed the study.
Abbreviations: ICS, inhaled corticosteroids; SFD, symptom-free day; EPAC, episode of poor asthma control.