Publication | Closed Access
Living with Asthma
106
Citations
38
References
1988
Year
Living with Asthma is a self‑management program for childhood asthma that evolved over 40 years at the Children’s Asthma Research Institute and Hospital, a residential treatment center in Denver, Colorado. The program is grounded in social‑learning theory—reciprocal determinism and the learning/performance dichotomy—guiding its design, variable selection, and the study that enrolled patients to evaluate its effects. Participants showed markedly better asthma knowledge and attitudes, fewer attacks, higher peak‑flow, reduced absenteeism, and lower health‑care costs, demonstrating the effectiveness of the self‑management skills taught.
This paper traces the roots of Living with Asthma, a self-management program for childhood asthma, from the Children's Asthma Research Institute and Hospital (CARIH), a residential treatment center in Denver, Colorado. The basic components of the program were developed and tested over the 40-year history of CARIH; the findings of an educational unit were added to this accumulated knowledge and expertise to complete the system.The program rests heavily on social learning theory, particularly two major tenets: 1) the concept of reciprocal determinism and 2) the learning/performance dichotomy. The crucial role of these concepts is described here, especially with respect to the design of the program and the selection of dependent variables.The remainder of this article describes the essentials of Living with Asthma, particularly the skills taught and performed by patients in a formal evaluation of the system. The design of the study, characteristics of patients enrolled in the program, and results obtained with the system are discussed. The program proved highly effective in significantly improving the knowledge of asthma in parents and their children, and in developing positive attitudes in both groups. It also produced significant reductions in the number of attacks experienced by the youngsters and improved their peak flow values. Participation in the program resulted in changes in morbidity indices of asthma, including significant reductions in school absenteeism and health-care costs incurred because of the disorder. These changes, it was concluded, reflected the result of the performance by patients of the self-management skills taught in Living with Asthma, coupled with the exceptional medical treatment they received.
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