Division of Public Health Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Department of Clinical & Health Psychology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
J Asthma. 2022 Jan;59(1):70-78. doi: 10.1080/02770903.2020.1837159. Epub 2020 Oct 27.
Structural determinants of health are social, economic, and environmental forces that generate unequal opportunities for resources and unequally distribute exposure to risk. For example, economic constraint, racial discrimination and segregation, and environmental injustice shape population-level asthma prevalence and severity. Structural determinants are especially relevant to consider in clinical settings because they affect everyday household asthma management.
To examine how structural determinants shape everyday household management of pediatric asthma and offer a framework for providers to understand asthma management in social context.
Qualitative interviews of caregivers for children with asthma.
Participants included 41 caregivers in two U.S. cities: St. Louis, Missouri ( = 25) and Gainesville, Florida ( = 16). Most caregivers were women (83%), Black (73%) and/or had low socioeconomic status (SES; 78%). Caregivers cared for children with asthma aged 0-4 (32%), 5-11 (68%) and 12-17 (54%).
We carried out narrative interviews with caregivers using an adapted McGill Illness Narrative Interview and using qualitative analysis techniques (e.g. inductive and deductive coding, constant comparison).
Caregivers highlighted three ways that structural determinants complicated asthma management at home: 1) housing situations, 2) competing household illnesses and issues, and 3) multi-household care.
By connecting social, economic, and environmental injustices to the everyday circumstances of asthma management, our study can help providers understand how social contexts challenge asthma management and can open conversations about barriers to adherence and strategies for supporting asthma management at home. We offer recommendations for medical system reform, clinical interactions, and policy advocacy.
健康的结构性决定因素是社会、经济和环境力量,这些力量为资源创造了不平等的机会,并使风险的暴露不平等地分配。例如,经济限制、种族歧视和隔离以及环境不公正影响了人群中哮喘的患病率和严重程度。结构性决定因素在临床环境中尤其需要考虑,因为它们影响日常家庭哮喘管理。
研究结构性决定因素如何影响儿科哮喘的日常家庭管理,并为提供者提供一个理解社会背景下哮喘管理的框架。
对有哮喘儿童的照顾者进行定性访谈。
参与者包括美国两个城市的 41 名照顾者:密苏里州圣路易斯( = 25)和佛罗里达州盖恩斯维尔( = 16)。大多数照顾者是女性(83%)、黑人(73%)和/或社会经济地位低(78%)。照顾者照顾的哮喘儿童年龄为 0-4 岁(32%)、5-11 岁(68%)和 12-17 岁(54%)。
我们对照顾者进行了叙事访谈,使用了改编的麦吉尔疾病叙事访谈和定性分析技术(例如,归纳和演绎编码,恒定性比较)。
照顾者强调了结构性决定因素在家中使哮喘管理复杂化的三种方式:1)住房情况,2)家庭中同时存在的其他疾病和问题,以及 3)多家庭护理。
通过将社会、经济和环境不公正与哮喘管理的日常情况联系起来,我们的研究可以帮助提供者了解社会背景如何挑战哮喘管理,并可以开启关于遵医嘱的障碍和支持家庭哮喘管理的策略的对话。我们提供了医疗体系改革、临床互动和政策倡导方面的建议。