Asthma is a chronic, inflammatory disorder of the airways, affecting nearly 10 million adults in the United States. Continued increases in asthma morbidity and the age-adjusted death rate-are disturbing given increased understanding of the disease pathophysiology and the availability of preventive medications that stabilize the underlying inflammatory processes of this disorder. Although asthma education programs have been widely described, rates of non-adherence with preventive medication are often over 50 percent. Because improvements in asthma knowledge have not resulted in consistent adherence, behaviorally focused strategies have been recommended. Behavioral processes influencing adherence have been linked in a theory called Protection Motivation Theory. An audiotaped education program has been developed that models Protection Motivation Theory and applies memory enhancement strategies to deliver asthma educational content recommended by the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute. This pilot study will utilize a randomized 2x2 factorial design with 40 adult asthmatic subjects.
The specific aims of the study are to determine the effects of the audiotaped asthma education program, an asthma education brochure, both of these, and standard provider education on the dependent variables. Dependent variables include subjective and objective measures of asthma medication adherence and validated measures of asthma self-efficacy, asthma control (including spirometry readings), asthma knowledge, and asthma quality of life. Subjects must have been prescribed an asthma preventive medication within the past year and have no other chronic illness with symptoms similar to asthma. Hypotheses will be tested using analysis of variance. The long-term goal of this research is to refine cost-effective, behaviorally focused educational interventions that improve asthma medication adherence and other bio-behavioral outcomes.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR)
Type
Exploratory Grants (P20)
Project #
1P20NR007791-01
Application #
6552282
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZNR1)
Project Start
2001-08-01
Project End
2004-07-31
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Florida
Department
Type
DUNS #
073130411
City
Gainesville
State
FL
Country
United States
Zip Code
32611
Krueger, Charlene; Horesh, Elan; Crossland, Brian Adam (2012) Safe sound exposure in the fetus and preterm infant. J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs 41:166-70
Krueger, Charlene (2010) Exposure to maternal voice in preterm infants: a review. Adv Neonatal Care 10:13-8; quiz 19-20
Krueger, Charlene; van Oostrom, JoHannes H; Shuster, Jonathan (2010) A longitudinal description of heart rate variability in 28--34-week-old preterm infants. Biol Res Nurs 11:261-8
Krueger, Charlene; Parker, Leslie; Chiu, Sheau-Huey et al. (2010) Maternal voice and short-term outcomes in preterm infants. Dev Psychobiol 52:205-12
Krueger, Charlene; Schue, Shirley; Parker, Leslie (2007) Neonatal intensive care unit sound levels before and after structural reconstruction. MCN Am J Matern Child Nurs 32:358-62
Beebe, Lora Humphrey (2006) Describing the health parameters of outpatients with schizophrenia. Appl Nurs Res 19:43-7
Elder, Jennifer Harrison; Shankar, Meena; Shuster, Jonathan et al. (2006) The gluten-free, casein-free diet in autism: results of a preliminary double blind clinical trial. J Autism Dev Disord 36:413-20
Krueger, Charlene; Wall, Susan; Parker, Leslie et al. (2005) Elevated sound levels within a busy NICU. Neonatal Netw 24:33-7
Schaffer, Susan D; Tian, Lili (2004) Promoting adherence: effects of theory-based asthma education. Clin Nurs Res 13:69-89
Kneipp, Shawn M; Drevdahl, Denise J (2003) Problems with parsimony in research on socioeconomic determinants of health. ANS Adv Nurs Sci 26:162-72

Showing the most recent 10 out of 11 publications