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Volume 32, Issue 1: February, 2005
Abstract
A Home Visiting Asthma Education Program: Challenges
to Program Implementation
Josephine V. Brown, PhD, Alice S. Demi, DNS, Marianne P.
Celano, PhD, Roger Bakeman, PhD, Lisa Kobrynski, MD, and Sandra
R. Wilson, PhD
This study describes the implementation of a nurse home
visiting asthma education program for low-income African American
families of young children with asthma. Of 55 families, 71%
completed the program consisting of eight lessons. The achievement
of learning objectives was predicted by caregiver factors,
such as education, presence of father or surrogate father
in the household, and safety of the neighborhood, but not
by child factors, such as age or severity of asthma as implied
by the prescribed asthma medication regimen. Incompatibility
between the scheduling needs of the families and the nurse
home visitors was a major obstacle in delivering the program
on time, despite the flexibility of the nurse home visitors.
The authors suggest that future home-based asthma education
programs contain a more limited number of home visits but
add telephone follow-ups and address the broader needs of
low-income families that most likely function as barriers
to program success.
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