4.5 Article

Medication Use Patterns among Urban Youth Participating in School-Based Asthma Education

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11524-010-9475-z

Keywords

Child and adolescent health; Chronic disease; Evaluation; Asthma; Medication use; Reliever; Controller; Exercise-induced

Funding

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, US Department of Health and Human Services [03030]

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Although pharmaceutical management is an integral part of asthma control, few community-based analyses have focused on this aspect of disease management. The primary goal of this analysis was to assess whether participation in the school-based Kickin' Asthma program improved appropriate asthma medication use among middle school students. A secondary goal was to determine whether improvements in medication use were associated with subsequent improvements in asthma-related symptoms among participating students. Students completed an in-class case-identification questionnaire to determine asthma status. Eligible students were invited to enroll in a school-based asthma curriculum delivered over four sessions by an asthma health educator. Students completed a pre-survey and a 3-month follow-up post-survey that compared symptom frequency and medication use. From 2004 to 2007, 579 participating students completed pre-and post-surveys. Program participation resulted in improvements in appropriate use across all three medication use categories: 20.0% of students initiated appropriate reliever use when feeling symptoms (p<0.001), 41.6% of students reporting inappropriate medication use before exercise initiated reliever use (p<0.001), and 26.5% of students reporting inappropriate medication use when feeling fine initiated controller use (p<0.02). More than half (61.6%) of participants reported fewer symptoms at post-survey. Symptom reduction was not positively associated with improvements in medication use in unadjusted and adjusted analysis, controlling for sex, asthma symptom classification, class attendance, season, and length of follow-up. Participation in a school-based asthma education program significantly improved reliever medication use for symptom relief and prior-to-exercise and controller medication use for maintenance. However, given that symptom reduction was not positively associated with improvement in medication use, pharmaceutical education must be just one part of a comprehensive asthma management agenda that addresses the multifactorial nature of asthma-related morbidity.

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