Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pulmonary Medicine, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Pediatr Pulmonol. 2022 May;57(5):1214-1222. doi: 10.1002/ppul.25851. Epub 2022 Feb 16.
School-supervised asthma therapy improves asthma medication adherence and morbidity, particularly among low-income and underrepresented minority (URM) children. However, COVID-19-related school closures abruptly suspended this therapy. In response, we developed a school-linked text message intervention.
The purpose of the study is to investigate the feasibility and acceptability of a school-linked text message intervention.
In December 2020, children previously enrolled in school-supervised asthma therapy in Central Massachusetts were recruited into this school-linked text message intervention. We sent two-way, automated, daily text reminders in English or Spanish to caregivers of these children, asking if they had given their child their daily preventive asthma medicine. Our study team notified the school nurse if the caregiver did not consistently respond to text messages. School nurses performed weekly remote check-ins with all families. The primary outcome of the study was feasibility: recruitment, retention, and intervention fidelity. Secondarily we examined intervention acceptability and asthma health outcomes.
Twenty-six children (54% male, 69% Hispanic, 8% Black, 23% White, 93% Medicaid insured) and their caregivers were enrolled in the intervention with 96% participant retention at 6 months. Caregiver response rate to daily text messages was 81% over the study period. Children experienced significant improvements in asthma health outcomes. The intervention was well accepted by nurses and caregivers.
A school-linked text messaging intervention for pediatric asthma is feasible and acceptable. This simple, accessible intervention may improve health outcomes for low-income and URM children with asthma. It merits further study as a potential strategy to advance health equity.
学校监督的哮喘治疗可改善哮喘药物的依从性和发病率,尤其是在低收入和代表性不足的少数族裔(URM)儿童中。但是,与 COVID-19 相关的学校关闭突然暂停了这种治疗。为此,我们开发了一种与学校相关的短信干预措施。
本研究的目的是调查学校相关短信干预措施的可行性和可接受性。
2020 年 12 月,马萨诸塞州中部以前参加过学校监督哮喘治疗的儿童被招募到这项与学校相关的短信干预措施中。我们向这些孩子的照顾者发送了双向、自动、每日的短信提醒,询问他们是否给孩子服用了每日预防哮喘的药物。如果照顾者没有持续回复短信,我们的研究团队会通知校护士。校护士每周与所有家庭进行远程查访。研究的主要结果是可行性:招募、保留和干预的保真度。其次,我们检查了干预措施的可接受性和哮喘健康结果。
26 名儿童(54%为男性,69%为西班牙裔,8%为黑人,23%为白人,93%为医疗补助保险)及其照顾者参加了干预措施,6 个月时保留率为 96%。在研究期间,照顾者对每日短信的回复率为 81%。儿童的哮喘健康结果有显著改善。该干预措施得到了护士和照顾者的认可。
学校相关的短信干预措施用于儿科哮喘是可行且可接受的。这种简单、易获取的干预措施可能会改善低收入和 URM 哮喘儿童的健康结果。它值得进一步研究,作为促进健康公平的潜在策略。