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Fostering Effective Asthma Self-Management Transfer in High-Risk Children: Gaps and Opportunities for Family Engagement.


ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION:The process of self-management knowledge, behavior, and skill development in children with asthma from families with low income is understudied. METHOD:Fifteen mothers of children with uncontrolled asthma participated in semistructured interviews exploring the transfer of asthma self-management responsibilities from parent to child. Team members performed thematic analysis of written transcripts. RESULTS:All participants were all the biological mothers and were impoverished, with most (73%) reporting an annual family income of less than $30,000. Their children ranged from 5 to 15 years old, were African American (100%), and had uncontrolled asthma based on national guidelines. Themes showed that child asthma self-management is difficult to achieve, that the transfer of asthma responsibility from mother to child is variable, and that mothers overestimate their child's developmental capacities for independent asthma self-management and have poor understanding of what well-controlled asthma means. DISCUSSION:Ongoing assessment and tailored guidance from health care providers are critical to support the pivotal role of mothers in their child's self-management development process.

SUBMITTER: Margolis RHF 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6815689 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Nov - Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Fostering Effective Asthma Self-Management Transfer in High-Risk Children: Gaps and Opportunities for Family Engagement.

Margolis Rachel H F RHF   Bellin Melissa H MH   Bookman Jaclyn R MacFarlane JRM   Collins Kathryn S KS   Bollinger Mary Elizabeth ME   Lewis-Land Cassia C   Butz Arlene M AM  

Journal of pediatric health care : official publication of National Association of Pediatric Nurse Associates & Practitioners 20190626 6


<h4>Introduction</h4>The process of self-management knowledge, behavior, and skill development in children with asthma from families with low income is understudied.<h4>Method</h4>Fifteen mothers of children with uncontrolled asthma participated in semistructured interviews exploring the transfer of asthma self-management responsibilities from parent to child. Team members performed thematic analysis of written transcripts.<h4>Results</h4>All participants were all the biological mothers and were  ...[more]

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