Background: Pediatric asthma is the most common chronic illness among children and is associated with poor quality of life, activity restriction, school absences, and thousands of physician visits annually. The purpose of this study is to measure the effectiveness of using an innovative tracking system (CareTRx) for the self-management of asthma, including daily and rescue medication use, among children and adolescents with pediatric asthma.
The primary study objective is to measure the effectiveness of using an innovative tracking system (CareTRx) for the self-management of asthma, including daily and rescue medication use, among children with asthma. The study objectives will be achieved using a pre-post design for the participants. The investigators aim to enroll at least 26 participants for a 3-month intervention period. With this pilot study, the investigators hope to examine the impact of self-management behaviors on health outcomes including asthma symptoms and quality of life measures.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
26
CareTRx is a novel device that can be applied to most MDI (meter dose inhaler) device and leverages mobile and cloud computing to objectively assess and provide real-visualize feedback to patients and providers around medication adherence and disease control in pediatric asthma.
Boston Children's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Number of Participants With Daily Medication Compliance
Total number participants who took their medication as planned will be measured. This will include measuring the number of participants with medication compliance who take their medications as planned based on the data from the monitoring device.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Number of Participants With Rescue Inhaler Use
Total number participants with rescue inhaler use throughout the course of the study.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Asthma Symptoms
Asthma symptom control as a measure of effectiveness of self-management behavior on asthma control, measured by Asthma Control Test (ACT). Asthma control test is a survey used to evaluate asthma control in patients. It includes 5 multiple questions that ask about how much of the time patient was having asthma symptoms. The higher the score the better asthma control. Lower scores especially less than 19 represent poor asthma control. each question has 5 answers. The total score is the sum of all the scores from 5 questions. the maximum score on the test is 25 which is excellent asthma control and the lowest is 0 which defines extremely poor asthma control.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Forced Expiratory Volume
Forced expiratory volume measured in liters is the volume of air which can be forcibly exhaled from the lungs in the first second of a forced expiration and helps with evaluation of asthma control. FEV1 was only measure at baseline to assess the participants asthma status at baseline.
Time frame: Baseline
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