Beck Andrew F, Seid Michael, McDowell Karen M, Udoko Mfonobong, Cronin Susan C, Makrozahopoulos Dimitrios, Powers Tricia, Fairbanks Sonja, Prideaux Jonelle, Vaughn Lisa M, Hente Elizabeth, Thurmond Sophia, Unaka Ndidi I
Division of General & Community Pediatrics Cincinnati Children's Cincinnati Ohio USA.
Division of Hospital Medicine Cincinnati Children's Cincinnati Ohio USA.
Learn Health Syst. 2023 Dec 11;8(2):e10403. doi: 10.1002/lrh2.10403. eCollection 2024 Apr.
Asthma is characterized by preventable morbidity, cost, and inequity. We sought to build an Asthma Learning Health System (ALHS) to coordinate regional pediatric asthma improvement activities.
We generated quantitative and qualitative insights pertinent to a better, more equitable care delivery system. We used electronic health record data to calculate asthma hospitalization rates for youth in our region. We completed an "environmental scan" to catalog the breadth of asthma-related efforts occurring in our children's hospital and across the region. We supplemented the scan with group-level assessments and focus groups with parents, clinicians, and community partners. We used insights from this descriptive epidemiology to inform the definition of shared aims, drivers, measures, and prototype interventions.
Greater Cincinnati's youth are hospitalized for asthma at a rate three times greater than the U.S. average. Black youth are hospitalized at a rate five times greater than non-Black youth. Certain neighborhoods bear the disproportionate burden of asthma morbidity. Across Cincinnati, there are many asthma-relevant activities that seek to confront this morbidity; however, efforts are largely disconnected. Qualitative insights highlighted the importance of cross-sector coordination, evidence-based acute and preventive care, healthy homes and neighborhoods, and accountability. These insights also led to a shared, regional aim: to equitably reduce asthma-related hospitalizations. Early interventions have included population-level pattern recognition, multidisciplinary asthma action huddles, and enhanced social needs screening and response.
Learning health system methods are uniquely suited to asthma's complexity. Our nascent ALHS provides a scaffold atop which we can pursue better, more equitable regional asthma outcomes.
哮喘的特点是具有可预防的发病率、成本和不公平性。我们试图建立一个哮喘学习健康系统(ALHS),以协调区域内改善小儿哮喘的各项活动。
我们生成了与更好、更公平的医疗服务体系相关的定量和定性见解。我们使用电子健康记录数据来计算本地区青少年的哮喘住院率。我们完成了一次“环境扫描”,以梳理出在我们儿童医院及整个地区开展的与哮喘相关工作的广度。我们通过小组层面的评估以及与家长、临床医生和社区合作伙伴的焦点小组讨论对扫描结果进行补充。我们利用这种描述性流行病学的见解来为共同目标、驱动因素、指标和原型干预措施的定义提供信息。
大辛辛那提地区青少年因哮喘住院的比率是美国平均水平的三倍。黑人青少年的住院率是非黑人青少年的五倍。某些社区承担着不成比例的哮喘发病负担。在辛辛那提市,有许多旨在应对这种发病率的与哮喘相关的活动;然而,各项工作在很大程度上是脱节的。定性见解突出了跨部门协调、基于证据的急性和预防性护理、健康的家庭和社区以及问责制的重要性。这些见解还促成了一个共同的区域目标:公平地减少与哮喘相关的住院率。早期干预措施包括人群层面的模式识别、多学科哮喘行动碰头会以及强化社会需求筛查和应对。
学习健康系统方法特别适合哮喘的复杂性。我们刚刚起步的ALHS提供了一个框架,在此基础上我们可以追求更好、更公平的区域哮喘防治成果。