The potential benefits of this research to public health include improved understanding of cultural factors in pediatric asthma self-management, improved self-management skills for children, and better asthma management skills for their parents. This could result in eased suffering and improved quality of life for millions of children and their families, and also reduce the economic burden borne by society in the forms of medical expenditures and lost productivity.
This proposal will create an interactive multimedia (IMM) program designed to support the self-management efforts of asthmatic children aged 5-10 years and their families. This behavior change program will be designed to promote self-management by (a) increasing child and caregiver knowledge about asthma, (b) encouraging compliance with medication protocols and environmental controls, and (c) increasing self-efficacy to create and implement an Asthma Action Plan.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
622
A game-based website for children with asthma aged 5-10 to teach basic self-management skills and a comprehensive adjunct informational website for parents
Text-based asthma education booklet for parents and children in PDF format
Oregon Center for Applied Science
Eugene, Oregon, United States
Change from baseline in children's knowledge about asthma
A 5-item knowledge scale was developed with program-specific questions regarding asthma physiology, response to worsening symptoms, and asthma medications. These items used a 3-response choice scheme: "true," "not true," and "I don't know." The total number of items correct was summed to form the knowledge scale.
Time frame: 45 days
Change from baseline in parents' knowledge about asthma
The Parent Knowledge Questionnaire (alpha = .81; Mesters, et al., 2003) was adapted to match program content, creating a 19-item knowledge scale covering basic knowledge about asthma (e.g., response to worsening symptoms, asthma medications, asthma triggers). The total number of correct items was summed to form the knowledge scale.
Time frame: 45 days
Change from baseline in children's attitudes toward medication
A 5-item knowledge scale was developed with program-specific questions regarding asthma physiology, response to worsening symptoms, and asthma medications. These items used a 3-response choice scheme: "true," "not true," and "I don't know." The total number of items correct was summed to form the knowledge scale.
Time frame: 45 days
Change from baseline in parents' attitudes about asthma self-management
The Asthma Attitude Survey (Mesters, et al., 2003), adapted to fit program content, assessed parents' attitudes regarding recognition of worsening symptoms, asthma medications, and triggers management. A 5-point Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (strongly agree) to 5 (strongly disagree) was used for responses, and items were summed to create an overall attitudes score.
Time frame: 45 days
Change from baseline in children's self-efficacy to improve asthma self-management
Three self-efficacy items addressed each child's confidence in being able to recognize warning signs, use his/her quick-relief medicine immediately when having warning signs, and take medications as directed. Response choices were presented on a Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (no way, I can't do that) to 4 (sure, I can do that).
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Time frame: 45 days
Change from baseline in parents' self-efficacy to improve asthma self-management
The Parent Asthma Self-Efficacy survey (Bursch, et al., 2003), adapted to fit program content, used a 5-point Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (not at all sure) to 5 (completely sure) to assess parents' confidence about administering medications and responding to worsening symptoms.
Time frame: 45 days
Change from baseline in Asthma Control Test
The Child-Asthma Control Test (C-ACT) for children 4-11 years old (Nathan, et al., 2004) was used to assess the child's current level of asthma control. The C-ACT contains 7 items-4 for the child's response and 3 for the parent's response, summed to create an asthma control score. Response choices for the children were presented on a 4-point Likert-type scale. The 3 parent items asked for frequency of symptoms over the past 4 weeks and were presented on a 6-point scale.
Time frame: 45 days