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Racial/ethnic differences in pediatric asthma management: the importance of asthma knowledge, symptom assessment, and family-provider collaboration

, PhDORCID Icon, , MAORCID Icon, , MSc, , PhDORCID Icon, , PhD & , PhD, ABPPORCID Icon
Pages 1395-1406 | Received 26 Jul 2019, Accepted 14 Jun 2020, Published online: 01 Jul 2020
 

Abstract

Background

Asthma disproportionately impacts youth from marginalized minority backgrounds. Aspects of core asthma management (asthma management and medication beliefs) were examined among a cohort of diverse families.

Methods

Caregiver-youth dyads (N = 92; Mage= 13.8 years; non-Hispanic/Latinx White (NLW) = 40%; Black/African-American = 25%; Hispanic/Latinx= 35%) completed a medication beliefs questionnaire (Medication Necessity, Medication Concerns) and a semi-structured interview (Family Asthma Management System Scale (FAMSS)). FAMSS subscales (Asthma Knowledge, Symptom Assessment, Family Response to Symptoms, Child Response to Symptoms, Environmental Control, Medication Adherence, Family-Provider Collaboration, and Balanced Integration) were used for analyses.

Results

More Hispanic/Latinx families were at or below the poverty line (75%) relative to NLW (22%) and Black/African-American (39%) families (p < 0.001). Adherence (p < 0.01), Knowledge (p < 0.001), and Symptom Assessment (p < 0.01) were higher for NLW relative to Black/African-American families. Collaboration was higher among NLW (p = 0.01) and Hispanic/Latinx families (p = 0.05). Effect sizes were moderate (η2= 0.10–0.12). Parental race/ethnicity moderated the relationship between adherence and parental perceived medication concern and necessity for NLW and Hispanic/Latinx families. As medication concerns increased, medication adherence decreased, however, only for NLW and Hispanic/Latinx families.

Conclusions

In this sample, racial/ethnic differences emerged for elements of asthma management. Interview-based ratings of asthma management among Black/African-American families depicted lower asthma knowledge, lower levels of family-provider collaboration, and lower medication adherence. The relationship between medication concerns and adherence appeared to differ by ethnic group. Future research is needed to elucidate cultural factors that influence family-provider relationships and health-related behaviors, like medication use/adherence.

Conflict of interest

The authors report no conflict of interest.

Additional information

Funding

Hassenfeld Child Health Innovation Institute and K24HD058794 (McQuaid, PI); F32HL138734 (Tackett, PI).

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