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Introduction
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Patient education is critical;
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It helps to control patients health;
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Asthma depends on various environmental factors;
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African-American children are at a high risk of asthma;
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Patient education on asthma lacks proper research;
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Teaching sessions may be useful to address the identified health concern.
The Spirit of Inquiry Ignited
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Many African-American children have asthma (Todoric, Bangdiwala, Vadlamudi, Alarcon, & Hernandez, 2015);
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These children are at risk regardless of social status and family income;
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Nutritional patterns, environmental pollution, and exposure to different triggers can cause asthma;
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The problem is that African-American children are likely to have this disease twice more compared to other races (the United States Environmental Protection Agency, 2014);
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It is urgent to address the problem;
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The provision of educational resources seems to a solution.
PICOT Question
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(P) In African American children with asthma
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(I) will the use of teaching sessions (30 minutes per week)
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(C) compared with the traditional teaching tools for managing the problem
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(O) have better effects on the management of the disease
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(T) over a year?
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PICOT question coincides with the clinical question.
Search Strategy
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CINAHL;
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Cochrane Library National Guidelines Clearinghouse;
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PubMed;
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TRIP;
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Children teaching strategies;
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Hereditary and environmental predictors of asthma.
Critical Appraisal of the Evidence Performed
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Asthma in children is marked by social and personal challenges (Agusala, Vij, Agusala, Dasari, & Kola, 2018);
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In rural areas, asthma care is not fully available;
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Everhart, Greenlee, Winter, and Fiese (2018) discovered that asthma in children correlates with the quality of life;
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Ding, Wathen, Altaye, and Mersha (2018) determined a link between African ancestry and asthma;
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Emotionally sensitive information was important in asthma education (Archibald, Hartling, Ali, Caine, & Scott, 2018).
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The mentioned findings are essential for the project.
Evidence Integrated with Clinical Expertise and Patient Preferences
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Evidence found will be translated into 30-minute teaching sessions;
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Results will be compared with a traditional approach to treating asthma in children medications;
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Lack of awareness of their own condition prevents children from proper treatment;
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It is better to combine medication therapy with patient education;
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Collaboration of childrens parents and their healthcare providers is required;
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A nurse should have knowledge of pharmacology, child psychology, and cultural competence to provide education.
The outcome of Practice Change Evaluated
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20 children completed a series of 30-minute lessons;
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Improved self-efficacy was reported by their parents;
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Increased awareness of taking medication was noted;
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The short timeframe for the identified intervention was effective;
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Other pediatric patients with asthma may also receive educational sessions;
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Expectations regarding the overall benefit of education were proved.
Project Outcomes Disseminated
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The educational setting was used;
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Managing asthma implemented in this project was considered useful;
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It was recognized as relevant for using in children with other chronic conditions as well;
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Parents and caretakers also received the findings of the project;
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They were encouraged to share information with friends;
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African-American children received new health opportunities.
Evaluation Plan and Methods
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Purpose and clinical question: can asthma education improve the diagnosis?
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Time: long-term one year, and short-term 2-3 months;
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Stakeholders: nurses, children, and their parents;
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Theoretical framework: asthma is predetermined by the quality of life (Everhart et al., 2018; Ding et al., 2018), design: a cohort study;
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Confidentiality: consent forms and personal information is secured;
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Sample/setting/procedure: 20 African-American children aged between 7and 12/ an educational setting / 30-minutes lessons.
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Instrument: a 30-minute lesson in the course of three months.
Conclusion
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Asthma education is important;
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It allows increasing patients awareness of their conditions;
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Significance of information for African-American children with asthma was proved;
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Parents reported improved self-care of their children;
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Teaching sessions may also be used for other chronic conditions;
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This problem needs further research.
References
Agusala, V., Vij, P., Agusala, V., Dasari, V., & Kola, B. (2018). Can interactive parental education impact health care utilization in pediatric asthma: A study in rural Texas. Journal of International Medical Research, 1-11. Web.
Archibald, M. M., Hartling, L., Ali, S., Caine, V., & Scott, S. D. (2018). Developing my asthma diary: A process exemplar of a patient-driven arts-based knowledge translation tool. BMC Pediatrics, 18(1), 186-196.
Ding, L., Li, D., Wathen, M., Altaye, M., & Mersha, T. B. (2018). African ancestry is associated with cluster-based childhood asthma subphenotypes. BMC Medical Genomics, 11(1), 51-62.
Everhart, R. S., Greenlee, J. L., Winter, M. A., & Fiese, B. H. (2018). Primary and secondary caregiver reports of quality of life in pediatric asthma: Are they comparable? Applied Research in Quality of Life, 13(2), 371-383.
Todoric, K., Bangdiwala, S., Vadlamudi, A., Alarcon, L., & Hernandez, M. (2015). Assessing asthma in African American children using the asthma control test (ACT) and childhood ACT. Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology: Official Publication of the American College of Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology, 114(4), 342-344.
United States Environmental Protection Agency. (2014). Childrens environmental health disparities: Black and African American children and asthma.
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