Asthma Care Plan/Action Plan

In-Home Asthma Intervention Improves Asthma Control, Quality of Life in Adults

Sponsoring Program: 
Asthma is often poorly controlled. Home visitation by community health workers (CHWs) to improve control among adults has not been adequately evaluated. This study tests the hypothesis that CHW home visits for adults with uncontrolled asthma improve outcomes relative to usual care.

Low-income adults with uncontrolled asthma saw both their asthma control and quality of life improve with the help of an in-home, self-management asthma support program delivered by community health workers (CHWs), according to a report published online by JAMA Internal Medicine.

Asthma affects 24.6 million American, including 17.5 million adults. Control of asthma is inadequate despite the availability of effective methods to manage it. Home-based self-management support to improve asthma control among children is well established. However, the effectiveness of home visits for adults has not been well studied.

James Krieger, M.D., M.P.H., of Public Health-Seattle and King County, Washington, and co-authors report on the Home-Based Asthma Support and Education trial (HomeBASE). The study enrolled 366 participants with uncontrolled asthma: 189 to usual care and 177 to the intervention, which included CHWs who provided education, support and service coordination during home visits. The CHWs provided an average of 4.9 home visits during a one-year period.

The intervention group had greater increases in the average number of symptom-free days over two weeks (2.02 days per two weeks more) and quality of life as measured on a questionnaire increased an average of 0.50 points. However, average urgent health care use episodes in the past 12 months decreased similarly in both groups from an average of 3.46 to 1.99 episodes in the intervention group and from an average of 3.30 to 1.96 episodes in the usual care group.

“We anticipate that this intervention could be readily replicated by health organizations serving diverse, low-income clients, suggesting that it could reduce asthma-related health inequities. Intervention protocols can be implemented without specialized training or resources. The cost per participant was approximately $1,300 (2013 U.S. dollars), substantially less than one year’s supply of an inhaled corticosteroid,” the study concludes.

Contact Name: 
James Krieger, MD, MPH
Contact Email: 
james.krieger@kingcounty.gov
Contact Phone: 
206-263-8227

Allergen & Asthma Alert

In recent years, defilement of the air has significantly impacted the health and hygiene of the population at large. In order to address this issue properly, information is needed on the particulates responsible for affecting the quality of air both outdoor as well as indoors. Pollutants vary greatly in their composition, as well as from place to place. Data is required to interpret a correlation between particulates with that of health and hygiene. This information may signify an overall idea about the air that composes an environment and its quality.

In recent years, defilement of the air has significantly impacted the health and hygiene of the population at large. In order to address this issue properly, information is needed on the particulates responsible for affecting the quality of air both outdoor as well as indoors. Pollutants vary greatly in their composition, as well as from place to place. Data is required to interpret a correlation between particulates with that of health and hygiene. This information may signify an overall idea about the air that composes an environment and its quality.

Therefore it is essential to have data available to properly manage the local air quality. It is in this context that EDLab has decided to provide Pollen grains and Mold count in the ambient air on a daily basis, available for the general public and professionals interested in this endeavor.

Pure Air Control Services through its AIHA accredited laboratory will be publish the Allergen & Asthma Alert www.pureaircontrols.com on a daily basis Monday through Friday.  A team of aerobiologists, under the supervision of Dr. Rajiv Sahay, FIAS, CIAQP (Laboratory Director of EDLab at Pure Air Control Services), will collect and analyze samples with cutting age technology from an air sampling station located at Clearwater, Florida (Tampa Bay Area 27.97° N and 82.76°W)

Each day the Pollengrains and Mold counts will be compared to the normal indoor environmental quality (IEQ) guideline. The groupings of the trap Pollen grains and Mold/Fungi are rated on a scale ranging from high, medium or low. High counts of these outdoor air quality pollutants correlate to an elevated rating, while low counts suggest reduced exposure to such allergens.

These same counts can be measured indoors. Subsequently, viewers, doctors, patients and allergy sufferers can determine the level of air quality and the corresponding effects upon their individual allergy symptoms.

“The EDLab staff is pleased to make this valuable and important aero-allergen information available to the public in the Tampa Bay area. It is important to raise our awareness to outdoor and indoor air quality issues, which affect our health and well-being, and the AAA is contributing to that awareness,” states Dr. Sahay.

Contact Name: 
Dr. Rajiv R Sahay
Contact Email: 
rsahay@pureaircontrols.com
Contact Phone: 
727-572-4550 ext. 304/301
Resource Category: 
Resource Type: 
Language: 
Literacy Level: 

Wellapets - Asthma Education Pets for phones and tablets!

Wellapets is an educational virtual pet game for phones and tablets which teaches and motivates kids ages 6-11 to manage asthma by caring for a lovable pet that also has asthma. Wellapets is created by LifeGuard Games in Boston with pediatricians and other clinicians in the area.

In Wellapets, kids adopt their own Wellapet from the App Store, Google Play or Amazon Appstore, play games with it, collect gifts for its home and ultimately take care of their pet. Wellapets has been designed with clinician input such that care for the pet teaches kids what they need to know to manage their own asthma. 

Our educational content focuses on: controller inhaler technique and timing, trigger avoidance and symptom recognition and action according to an Asthma Action Plan.

We've been featured in MobiHealthNews, CBS, asth.ma and Bostinno!

File Attachment: 
Contact Name: 
Alexander Ryu
Contact Email: 
alex@lifeguardgames.com
Contact Phone: 
507-261-5938
Language: 
Literacy Level: 

Pages