2009
DOI: 10.1080/02770900802712971
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Urban Minority Children with Asthma: Substantial Morbidity, Compromised Quality and Access to Specialists, and the Importance of Poverty and Specialty Care

Abstract: Urban minority children with asthma average 1 asthma symptom daily, 1 exacerbation monthly, and 7 missed school days, 6 missed parental work days, 3 ED visits, and 1 hospitalization yearly; most receive their usual asthma care in EDs and have no asthma care plan or asthma specialist. Urban minority asthmatic children need interventions to reduce morbidity and improve access to specialists and asthma care plans, especially among the poor and African-Americans.

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Cited by 135 publications
(85 citation statements)
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“…Urban children frequently have barriers that limit access to primary care, and thus results are relevant to providers in a variety of settings because each point of contact with the health care system presents a unique opportunity to initiate interventions. [20][21][22] …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Urban children frequently have barriers that limit access to primary care, and thus results are relevant to providers in a variety of settings because each point of contact with the health care system presents a unique opportunity to initiate interventions. [20][21][22] …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bivariate analysis between these 2 groups was first performed to evaluate for differences in factors that have been previously identified as affecting primary outcomes in asthma hospitalizations, which included gender, obesity status, ethnicity, age, asthma severity, and specific comorbidities (prematurity, allergic rhinitis, eczema, atopy, OSA, GER, and ETS exposure). 9,12,14,20,26 The same factors were then evaluated in a bivariate analysis to assess for associations with the primary outcomes. On the basis of these results, a multivariate regression was performed to evaluate for associations between overweight status and primary outcomes using a model controlling for significant cofactors identified in the second bivariate analysis (age, gender, ethnicity, asthma severity, and comorbidities -, Logistic regression analysis was performed evaluating for differences among all listed ethnic groups; P value reflects there was no significant difference across all groups using a logistic regression analysis; BMI percentile: lean, ,85th; overweight, 85th-95th; obese, .95th.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[4][5][6] However, health care providers do not routinely follow asthma guideline recommendations, 7,8 resulting in substandard care and poor health outcomes. [9][10][11][12][13][14] One of the shortcomings of asthma guidelines is the limited extent to which health care providers are provided with tools to follow the recommended care. 15 There have been provider-targeted interventions, [16][17][18][19][20][21] but most interventions have been patient-focused.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Children living in poverty have been shown to have higher utilization of urgent and acute care, lower utilization of primary and specialist care, and higher prevalence of both asthma and obesity. [42][43][44] Even when obesity was recognized in this study, the provider did not always identify it as a discharge diagnosis. At the time of discharge only 5.4% of subjects with overweight or obesity received a diagnosis that indicated overweight or obesity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[39][40][41][42] Future studies may support stronger recommendations in the NAEPP and Global Initiative for Asthma guidelines related to weight recognition and management in all health care settings and in all age groups for children with asthma. The urban setting and prevalence of government-insured subjects in this study (66.7%) lends support to capitalizing on the opportunity to recognize and treat overweight and obesity in the inpatient setting.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%