Pediatric asthma, the most common chronic illness of childhood, is increasing in prevalence, morbidity and mortality - particularly in minority children. This application seeks to establish the Rhode Island -Puerto Rico Asthma Center (RIPRAC) for reducing disparities in asthma among Latino children. Brown University faculty involved with an extensive pediatric asthma research program will join with epidemiologists, clinicians, and health services researchers from the minority serving University of Puerto Rico to study potentially overlooked determinants of disparity. An ambitious training component (based on a successful T32 research training program) will involve individuals from both sites at both sites. The RIPRAC Research AIMS include four projects that seek to understand the causes of disparities at multiple levels - the biomedical, the individual/family, and the socioenvironmental level. The four projects, respectively, will 1) examine discrepancies between the diagnosis of asthma as assessed by parental report, the primary care medical record and our systematic diagnosis base on the NHLBI guidelines; 2) assess characteristics (prescription practices, shared decision making, continuity and access to care) of the health care system that may differentially affect asthma morbidity; 3) evaluate family beliefs, the burden of asthma management and medication adherence as they affect asthma morbidity and health care utilization in Latino and Anglo children; and 4) study the relation of symptom perception to pediatric asthma discrepancies. Subjects for all 4 projects will be the same 300 mainland Anglos, 200 mainland Latinos (of Puerto Rican and Dominican descent) and 400 island Puerto Rico children with asthma, aged 7-15, thereby promoting comparability and efficiency. Chi-square analyses and ANOVA's will be used to assess differences between groups; techniques of logistic regression and multiple regression will be used to model the effects of covariates. The RIPRAC Training component will provide clinical research education and supervision to Puerto Rican trainees and faculty, enhance cultural awareness of Brown personnel as it relates to asthma disparities, and launch at least three trainee-led pilot research projects in the area.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01HL072519-02
Application #
6668621
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHL1-CSR-P (S2))
Program Officer
Taggart, Virginia
Project Start
2002-09-30
Project End
2007-07-31
Budget Start
2003-08-01
Budget End
2004-07-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2003
Total Cost
$515,049
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Puerto Rico Med Sciences
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
948108063
City
San Juan
State
PR
Country
United States
Zip Code
00936
Canino, Glorisa; Garro, Aris; Alvarez, Maria M et al. (2012) Factors associated with disparities in emergency department use among Latino children with asthma. Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 108:266-70
Canino, Glorisa; McQuaid, Elizabeth L; Rand, Cynthia S (2009) Addressing asthma health disparities: a multilevel challenge. J Allergy Clin Immunol 123:1209-17; quiz 1218-9
Canino, Glorisa; Vega, William A; Sribney, William M et al. (2008) Social Relationships, Social Assimilation, and Substance-Use Disorders among Adult Latinos in the U.S. J Drug Issues 38:69-101
Ortega, Alexander N; Chavez, Ligia; Inkelas, Moira et al. (2007) Persistence of mental health service use among Latino children: a clinical and community study. Adm Policy Ment Health 34:353-62
Ortega, Alexander N; Feldman, Jonathan M; Canino, Glorisa et al. (2006) Co-occurrence of mental and physical illness in US Latinos. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 41:927-34
Canino, Glorisa; Koinis-Mitchell, Daphne; Ortega, Alexander N et al. (2006) Asthma disparities in the prevalence, morbidity, and treatment of Latino children. Soc Sci Med 63:2926-37