328860
Reducing Emergency Department Visits and Improving Environmental and Health Outcomes in Adults with Asthma Enrolled in a Home-based CHW Intervention
This presentation will be given by a CHW and describes the CHW-based approach to reduce ED visits and improve asthma outcomes among adults enrolled in the Helping Chicago’s Westside Adults Breathe and Thrive program. CHW interventions are proven to be effective at addressing pediatric asthma; however, this program is among the first ever CHW-led asthma interventions to focus on adults.
CHWs make 5-6 home visits over the course of the year-long intervention, providing comprehensive and individualized asthma education to adults with poorly controlled asthma. They work closely with participants to conduct home environmental assessments to identify possible asthma triggers and how to avoid them, promote smoking cessation, and address patient comorbidities.
Preliminary results are based on 40 adults who have completed six months of the year-long intervention. There is significant reduction from baseline to the six month follow-up in daytime symptoms (59.7%), nighttime symptoms (44.8%), and days needed rescue medication (35.6%). ED visits were reduced by 56.4%. CHWs are an effective means of improving asthma symptoms and reducing urgent health care visits among adults with severe asthma. These findings from this innovative CHW-led asthma intervention have the potential to influence policy by demonstrating that CHWs significantly improve health disparities and decrease healthcare costs, in Chicago and beyond.
Learning Areas:
Administer health education strategies, interventions and programsChronic disease management and prevention
Implementation of health education strategies, interventions and programs
Learning Objectives:
List the key components of a CHW-based asthma intervention.
Name three potential barriers in working with adults with asthma that have other co-morbidities.
Describe different techniques to educate adult patients on self-management of asthma.
Keyword(s): Asthma, Community-Based Research (CBPR)
Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I contributed to the ideas discussed in the submitted abstract and drafted the abstract. The co-authors assisted in editing.
Any relevant financial relationships? No
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.