4.7 Article

Written Action Plan in Pediatric Emergency Room Improves Asthma Prescribing, Adherence, and Control

Journal

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1164/rccm.201001-0115OC

Keywords

asthma; child; drug prescribing; medication adherence; patient discharge

Funding

  1. Fonds de la Recherche en Sante du Quebec [051703]
  2. Fonds de partenariat sur l'utilization optimale des medicaments, Conseil du Medicament, Ministry of Health and Social Services, Quebec, Canada

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Rationale: An acute-care visit for asthma often signals a management failure. Although a written action plan is effective when combined with self-management education and regular medical review, its independent value remains controversial. Objectives: We examined the efficacy of providing a written action plan coupled with a prescription (WAP-P) to improve adherence to medications and other recommendations in a busy emergency department. Methods: We randomized 219 children aged 1-17 years to receive WAP-P (n = 109) or unformatted prescription (UP) (n = 110). All received fluticasone and albuterol inhalers, fitted with dose counters, to use at the discretion of the emergency physician. The main outcome was adherence to fluticasone (use/prescribed X 100%) over 28 days. Secondary outcomes included pharmacy dispensation of oral corticosteroids, beta(2)-agonist use, medical follow-up, asthma education, acute-care visits, and control. Measurements and Main Results: Although both groups showed a similar drop in adherence in the initial 14 days, adherence to fluticasone was significantly higher over Days 15-28 in children receiving WAP-P (mean group difference, 16.13% [2.09, 29.91]). More WAP-P than UP patients filled their oral corticosteroid prescription (relative risk, 1.31 [1.07, 1.60]) and were well-controlled at 28 days (1.39 [1.04, 1.86]). Compared with UP, use of WAP-P increased physicians' prescription of maintenance fluticasone (2.47 [1.53, 3.99]) and recommendation for medical follow-up (1.87 [1.48, 2.35]), without group differences in other outcomes. Conclusions: Provision of a written action plan significantly increased patient adherence to inhaled and oral corticosteroids and asthma control and physicians' recommendation for maintenance fluticasone and medical follow-up, supporting its independent value in the acute-care setting.

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