• Am. J. Med. · Apr 1996

    Inadequate outpatient medical therapy for patients with asthma admitted to two urban hospitals.

    • T V Hartert, H H Windom, R S Peebles, L R Freidhoff, and A Togias.
    • Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.
    • Am. J. Med. 1996 Apr 1; 100 (4): 386394386-94.

    PurposeTo determine the patterns of chronic outpatient management in urban patients with moderate and severe asthma, and to assess medical practice adherence to the Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma from the National Asthma Education Program (NAEP).Patients And MethodsThis is a cross-sectional survey of adult patients with asthma admitted to the general medical services at the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutes (Johns Hopkins Hospital and Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center) Baltimore, Maryland. Subjects were 101 adults admitted with an asthma exacerbation from February 1992 through January 1993. Using a validated questionnaire, these subjects were surveyed within 48 hours of admission concerning their chronic outpatient medical management and the measures patients or their physicians took to alleviate symptoms during the asthma exacerbation leading to hospitalization.ResultsThe average asthma admission rate in the past year for this group of patients was 2.5, indicative of moderate to severe disease. Less than half of these patients had been prescribed inhaled anti-inflammatory therapy. Of the patients who had previously been shown the metered dose inhaler technique by a health care professional, 11% could perform all components of this technique correctly. Only 28% of patients had been given an action plan by their physician in the event of an acute exacerbation. Sixty percent of patients who contacted their physician during the exacerbation that preceded admission had no changes made in their treatment regimen. In those whose exacerbation lasted at least 24 hours, the average beta-agonist metered dose inhaler use during the 24 hour prior to admission was 44.8 +/- 7.8 puffs (mean +/- standard error of the mean). Older age, (current smoking, and race (black) were the most significant correlates of inhaled beta-agonist use during this period.ConclusionsThis is the first documentation of multiple problems in conforming with the standards of care delineated by the NAEP as they relate to the outpatient management of inner-city patients with moderate to severe asthma in the United States. In this population of patients with asthma, management was characterized by underutilization of anti-inflammatory therapy, inability to use inhalation devices properly, inadequate communication between patient and physician of an action plan to be utilized in the event of an acute exacerbation and inadequate physician intervention during the acute stages of the exacerbation. There was also overutilization of inhaled beta-agonists during exacerbations. It is imperative that these aspects of management, for which the NAEP has set standards of care, are addressed as part of the effort to reduce asthma morbidity in the urban United States.

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