| Literature DB >> 33759614 |
Zainab Al Kindi1,2, Catherine McCabe1, Margaret McCann1.
Abstract
Given the leading role school nurses occupy within the school setting, they are often the most suited health care professionals to lead asthma programs. However, most school-based asthma programs have been conducted by researchers outside the school setting. Thus, we aim to determine what is currently known about the type of school nurse-led asthma intervention programs and their impact on children's asthma-related outcomes. This article describes published literature on school nurse-led asthma intervention programs for the school-aged population using Arksey and O'Malley's scoping review framework. A search strategy was developed and implemented in six electronic databases from 1980 to 2020. Results showed that school nurse-led asthma programs were predominantly educational interventions. Yet given the positive outcomes of school nurse-led asthma interventions reported across the articles reviewed, it is important to emphasize the leadership role school nurses assume in asthma programs, to promote more positive asthma-related outcomes in school children.Entities:
Keywords: asthma programs; child health outcomes; nurse-led intervention program
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33759614 PMCID: PMC8750152 DOI: 10.1177/10598405211003303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sch Nurs ISSN: 1059-8405 Impact factor: 2.835
PEO Framework.
| Step | Description |
|---|---|
| Population | School-aged children aged 5–18 years, their parents, school staff, nurses of any type, and other health care professionals. |
| Exposure | School nurse-led asthma interventions, defined as any type of asthma program (educational or noneducational) directed, provided, or administered by school nurses to enhance asthma management outcomes among students, parents, and the community and which were conducted in a school setting were included. |
| Outcome | Asthma management outcomes including knowledge and skills needed for asthma management; therefore, reducing health care utilization (ER visits, hospitalization) and missed school/workdays. Children’s health outcomes were broadly defined to include medication use, asthma severity, symptoms’ frequency, number of exacerbations, activity limitations, and quality of life. |
Note. Exclusion criteria: Studies with asthma interventions who were not school nurse-led and studies outside the school setting were excluded. Case management and infection prevention studies were also excluded. PEO = population, exposure, and outcomes; ER = emergency room.
Search Strategy Index Terms Used in Databases.
| Concepts/Databases | Index Term: CINAHL | Index Term: MEDLINE (EBSCO) | Index Term: PsycINFO | Index Term: EMBASE | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Asthma | (MH “Asthma+”) | (MH “Asthma+”) | No index term | “asthma”/exp | |
| #2 | Nurse | (MH “Nurses+”) | (MH “Nurses+”) | No index term | “nurse”/exp OR “nursing staff”/exp | |
| #3 | School | (MH “Schools+”) | (MH “Schools+”) | No index term | “school”/exp | |
| Databases | Asthma (AND) | School (AND) | Nurse | |||
| CINAHL | (MH “Asthma+”) OR asthma* | (MH “Schools+”) OR (school* OR college* OR high school OR high-school OR preschool OR pre-school OR institute* OR junior school OR junior-school) | (MH “Nurses+”) OR (nurse* OR nursing*) | |||
| MEDLINE | (MH “Asthma+”) OR asthma* | (MH “Schools+”) OR (school* OR college* OR high school OR high-school OR preschool OR pre-school OR institute* OR junior school OR junior-school) | (MH “Nurses+”) OR nurse* OR nursing* | |||
| EMBASE | “asthma”/exp | “school”/exp OR school* OR college* OR high school OR high-school OR preschool OR pre-school OR institute* OR junior school OR junior-school | “‘nurse”/exp OR “nursing”/exp OR nurse* OR nursing* | |||
| PsychINFO | asthma* | school* OR college* OR high school OR high-school OR preschool OR pre-school OR institute* OR junior school OR junior-school | nurse* OR nursing* | |||
Figure 1.Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses flowchart.
Characteristics of the Included Studies.
| # | Citation, Country | Objective | Design | Population Sample | Nature of Intervention | Tools | Outcomes Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| To examine the effectiveness of an asthma education program on children and their parents. | RCT | 36 Children with asthma (8–12 years old, mean age = 10.2) randomly assigned to an intervention group (18) and (18) a control group. | SN attended two 4-hr in-service sessions to improve asthma management knowledge and skills. After the training, SN delivered a 20-min individual training session to children over 8 weeks. | Five standard questionnaires: Children’s asthma knowledge: 20-items; Parent’s asthma knowledge: 55-items; Child’s asthma attitude: 28-items; Child health locus of control: 20-items; Functional status: 28-items. | Children’s asthma knowledge ( |
| 2 |
| To compare a nurse-led clinic in schools versus care in general practice for adolescents with asthma. | An RCT in four schools, a parallel observation study in 2 schools |
| Adolescents with asthma were individually randomized to receive a review of their asthma status at school (school clinic group | Pediatric quality of life questionnaire; Asthma knowledge and attitude quiz. | Primary: Attendance for an asthma review ( |
| 3 | To test whether a tailored inhaler technique video intervention (1) could be feasibly implemented by school nurses and (2) improve the inhaler technique of children with asthma. | Quasi-experimental design |
| SN were trained on MDI technique using a validated training process. Then, SN recruited asthmatic children measuring children’s inhaler technique before and after watching tailored inhaler technique videos. Immediate feedback was given to the child and a record of child performance was shown. One month later, reassessment was done | Validated checklist | Inhaler technique | |
| 4 |
| To investigate whether high adherence to ICS asthma preventive treatment among students with persistent asthma was achievable by school nurse supervised asthma therapy. | Pilot, prospective, RCT |
| Directly observed therapy by SN every day the school was in session and every evening by parents on school days. Every morning and evening on weekends and holidays. | The total proportion of ICS morning doses ( | |
| 5 |
| To examine the impact of a novel, school nurse-supervised asthma therapy program on health care utilization. | Quasi-experimental, time series design |
| SN direct observation of daily preventive asthma medication | School records | ER visits ( |
| 6 |
| To evaluate the effectiveness of a five-element school nurse-led asthma management program in providing asthma care and reducing school absenteeism. | Quasi-experimental | 15 School nurses | 28 School nurses trained through an on-site, one-on-one 30-min session, provided with training manual and instruction on five elements (asthma risk assessment, control, education, medication, and communication with the medical provider). | Retrospective review of school records. | School absence ( |
| 7 |
| To examine the effectiveness of a theoretically based school nurse-led asthma intervention on asthma symptoms, self-management, peak flow meter usage, daily activities, and school absences in children 7–12 years old. | An RCT, repeated measures design |
| The treatment group received the asthma intervention composed of theoretically based school nurse-led asthma intervention, which comprised six weekly 30-min group lessons, PFM for personal use, and hands-on experiences. | Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ) | Symptoms ( |
Note. SN = school nurse; NA = not applicable; ER = emergency room. a Refer to level of evidence in Table 4.
Melnyk Levels of Evidence.
| Level 1—Systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials, clinical guidelines based on systematic reviews or meta-analyses |
| Level 2—One or more randomized controlled trials |
| Level 3—Controlled trial (no randomization) |
| Level 4—Case-control or cohort study |
| Level 5—Systematic review of descriptive and qualitative studies |
| Level 6—Single descriptive or qualitative study |
| Level 7—Expert opinion |