Dawson Robin M, Heiney Sue P, Messias DeAnne Hilfinger, Ownby Dennis
College of Nursing, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, United States.
Augusta University, Augusta, GA, United States.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2020 Dec 1;9(12):e18977. doi: 10.2196/18977.
Rural Latino children with asthma suffer high rates of uncontrolled asthma symptoms, emergency department visits, and repeat hospitalizations. This vulnerable population must negotiate micro- and macrolevel challenges that impact asthma management, including language barriers, primary care access, parental time off from work, insurance coverage, distance from specialty sites, and documentation status. There are few proven interventions that address asthma management embedded within this unique context.
Using a bio-ecological approach, we will determine the feasibility of a patient-centered collaborative program between rural Latino children with asthma and their families, school-based nursing programs, and primary care providers, facilitated by the use of a smartphone-based mobile app with a Spanish-language interface. We hypothesize that improving communication through a collaborative, patient-centered intervention will improve asthma management, empower the patient and family, decrease outcome disparities, and decrease direct and indirect costs.
The specific aims of this study include the following: (1) Aim 1: produce and validate a Spanish translation of an existing asthma management app and evaluate its usability with Latino parents of children with asthma, (2) Aim 2: develop and evaluate a triadic, patient-centered asthma intervention preliminary protocol, facilitated by the bilingual mobile app validated in Aim 1, and (3) Aim 3: investigate the feasibility of the patient-centered asthma intervention from Aim 2 using a waiting-list randomized controlled trial (RCT) to investigate the effects of the intervention on school days missed and medication adherence.
Mobile app translation, initial usability testing, and app software refinement were completed in 2019. Analysis is in progress. Preliminary protocol testing is underway; we anticipate that the waiting-list RCT, using the refined protocol developed in Aim 2, will commence in fall 2020.
Tailored, technology-based solutions have the potential to successfully address issues affecting asthma management, including communication barriers, accessibility issues, medication adherence, and suboptimal technological interventions.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04633018; https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04633018.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/18977.
患有哮喘的农村拉丁裔儿童哮喘症状控制不佳、急诊就诊以及再次住院的比例很高。这一弱势群体必须应对影响哮喘管理的微观和宏观层面的挑战,包括语言障碍、获得初级医疗服务、家长请假、保险覆盖范围、与专科医疗机构的距离以及文件状态等。在这种独特背景下,几乎没有经过验证的干预措施来解决哮喘管理问题。
采用生物生态学方法,我们将确定一个以患者为中心的协作项目的可行性,该项目涉及患有哮喘的农村拉丁裔儿童及其家庭、学校护理项目和初级医疗服务提供者,并通过使用具有西班牙语界面的智能手机移动应用程序来推动。我们假设通过协作性的、以患者为中心的干预措施改善沟通,将改善哮喘管理、增强患者及其家庭的能力、减少结果差异,并降低直接和间接成本。
本研究的具体目标包括以下几点:(1)目标1:制作并验证现有哮喘管理应用程序的西班牙语翻译版本,并评估其对患有哮喘儿童的拉丁裔家长的可用性;(2)目标2:开发并评估一个由目标1中验证的双语移动应用程序推动的、以患者为中心的三元哮喘干预初步方案;(3)目标3:使用等待名单随机对照试验(RCT)研究目标2中以患者为中心的哮喘干预措施的可行性,以调查该干预措施对缺课天数和药物依从性的影响。
移动应用程序翻译、初始可用性测试和应用程序软件优化于2019年完成。分析正在进行中。初步方案测试正在进行;我们预计使用目标2中制定的完善方案进行的等待名单RCT将于2020年秋季开始。
量身定制的、基于技术的解决方案有可能成功解决影响哮喘管理的问题,包括沟通障碍、可及性问题、药物依从性以及技术干预效果不佳等问题。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04633018;https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04633018。
国际注册报告识别码(IRRID):DERR1-10.2196/18977。