Background: Little is known about how childhood asthma affects immigrant Hispanic families in the United States. Qualitative research is effective for understanding the social, cultural, functional, and structural aspects of asthma in the family context. Furthermore, such knowledge is necessary to develop culturally appropriate interventions for these families.
Objectives: To describe participants' perceptions of their roles in caring for an asthmatic child, to compare family patterns of caring for an asthmatic child by parents' country of origin, to identify barriers to caring for an asthmatic child, and to evaluate specific coping needs of low-income immigrant Hispanic families caring for an asthmatic child.
Methods: Five focus groups were conducted with low-income, immigrant, Spanish-speaking Hispanic adults caring for an asthmatic child, including community health workers, mothers, fathers, and grandparents, along with women with asthma. Audiotaped focus groups were transcribed verbatim in Spanish, forward translated into English, and back translated into Spanish. Data analysis was performed using qualitative analytic methods.
Results: Forty-one participants represented a range of countries of origin. Different themes emerged for community health workers vs parents and grandparents and for women vs men caring for a child with asthma. All the participants reported strong beliefs in using folk medicines. Barriers identified included language, culture, poverty, lack of health insurance, and poor living conditions.
Conclusions: Results highlight the lack of asthma self-management skills, diagnostic uncertainty, and the use of folk medicine as factors that should be taken into consideration when tailoring interventions to improve asthma outcomes in this vulnerable population.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1081-1206(10)60938-6 | DOI Listing |
Children (Basel)
December 2024
Tasmanian Health Service-Northwest, Burnie, TAS 7320, Australia.
Background/objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic created many challenges for health services, particularly during lockdown periods. Asthma is one of the most common childhood conditions, and children with asthma are generally cared for in an outpatient setting. In regional Northwest Tasmania, during the COVID-19 lockdowns, asthma and allergy outpatient clinic services were transferred to a virtual platform in the form of telehealth appointments for routine consultations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
December 2024
Department of Clinical Sciences in Lund, Respiratory Medicine, Allergology and Palliative Medicine, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Background: Exertional breathlessness is a key symptom in cardiorespiratory disease and can be quantified using incremental exercise testing, but its prognostic significance is unknown. We evaluated the ability of abnormally high breathlessness intensity during incremental cycle exercise testing to predict all-cause, respiratory, and cardiac mortality.
Study Design And Methods: Longitudinal cohort study of adults referred for exercise testing followed prospectively for mortality assessed using the Swedish National Causes of Death Registry.
Rev Mal Respir
January 2025
Université de Franche-Comté, CHU Besançon, centre d'investigation clinique 1431, LASA 3189, Besançon, France. Electronic address:
In a qualitative investigation carried out in different environments (hospital, school, home) among 12-to-21-year-old asthmatics, we describe their perceptions of a pathology that is at once chronic and intermittent. More specifically, we show how an asthma attack constitutes a traumatic experience occurring in a temporality characterized by bodily upheaval. We describe the emotional labor provided by young asthmatics in their interpretation of their bodily signs, which are often read differently than in the medical sphere.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Using patient-reported outcome measures (PROM) in a shared-space mental health-integrated specialty clinic, we explored the feasibility, acceptance, and experience of youth with asthma and diabetes, their families, and the healthcare team.
Method: Using mixed methods, we examined feasibility, acceptability, and experience of PROM inclusion in caring for youth with asthma (n = 7) and diabetes (n = 11), their families (n = 18), and healthcare providers (n = 13). Completion and receipt of PROM (feasibility), postvisit surveys (acceptance), and structured interviews (experience) between June 2019 and February 2020.
Ann Am Thorac Soc
November 2024
University of Pittsburgh, Pediatric Pulmonary Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States.
Background: Hispanic/Latino adults commonly experience high psychosocial stress yet little is known about the pathways linking sociocultural stressors and asthma in this population.
Objective: Whether and how sociocultural stressors are associated with asthma in Hispanic/Latino adults.
Methods: Cross-sectional study of 4,759 adults aged 18 to 74 years who participated in the Sociocultural Ancillary Study of the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos.
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