Transcript Document

ALA’s Asthma Programs
Reducing the Burden of Illness and Death
Katherine Pruitt
Director, Best Practices
CDC Teleconference
May 2003
About the Lung Association
• Founded in 1904 to combat tuberculosis
• Current mission is to prevent lung disease
and promote lung health
• Grass-roots association of 75 state and local
constituents, with numerous additional
small branch offices
Visionary Lung Health Goals
• Tobacco-related lung disease will be eliminated in
future generations
• Asthma will no longer be a burden to patients and
their families, nor will it cause illness and death
• The air we breathe will not cause or worsen lung
disease
• ALA will monitor lung health status and be the
champion for those affected by lung disease
Asthma Results Indicators
• By 2007, states will have asthma public health
infrastructures and 50% of states will meet
minimum CDC guidelines for funding
• By 2007, 75% of children will attend schools that
have adopted a comprehensive asthma
management program
• By 2010, there will be a 50% reduction in
hospitalization and emergency room visits
• By 2007, there will be a 50% increase in people
with asthma getting influenza vaccine
How Will We Get There?
• Advocacy
• Education
• Research
Focus on Advocacy
•
•
•
•
Public Health Infrastructure
Schools
Access to Health Care
Air Quality
Public Health Infrastructure
• State Health Program
• Healthy People 2010
• Comprehensive Program Infrastructure
Asthma in Schools
• Asthma Medication in Schools
• School Nurses
• Comprehensive School Legislation
Access to Health Care
• Prescription
Asthma
Medications
• Emergency
Services
• Specialty Care
Air Quality
• Indoor Air Quality in Schools
• Environmental Tobacco Smoke
• High Air Pollution Days
Focus on Education
• Early Childhood Asthma Programs
• Open Airways For Schools
• IAQ Tools for Schools
• Asthma-Friendly Schools Initiative
• Master Home Environmentalist
• Asthma Certification Program
Early Childhood Asthma Programs
• Co-sponsor, with Sesame Workshop, of Sesame
Street A is for Asthma, a bilingual asthma
management video for preschoolers
• Counting on You, developed by ALA of
Wisconsin, includes a concise manual and
training materials for daycare and preschool
providers
Open Airways For Schools
• School-based asthma education program,
developed and tested at Columbia University
• Teaches children, aged 8-11, how to detect
asthma warning signs and environmental factors
that can trigger an asthma attack
Open Airways For Schools
• Six 40-minute group sessions for children
with asthma held during the school day
• Written materials for parents
• Homework assignments with parents
OAS Learning Objectives
• Recognize asthma symptoms
• Initiate management steps
• Communicate with parents and teachers
• Recognize when medical care is needed
OAS Outcomes
• Increased self-management skills, self-efficacy
and influence on parent’s management
decisions.
• Improved quality of life and social support
from peers
• Improved academic performance
• Reduced frequency of days with symptoms of
asthma
OAS School Study Outcomes
OAS Implementation
• Trained volunteers, including school nurses,
parents, health care students, and community
groups teach the program
• Funding for implementation from CDC and
EPA
• Since 1995, program has been implemented in
over 30,000 schools reaching more than
400,000 children
Indoor Air Quality Tools for Schools
• Partnership with EPA’s Indoor
Environments Division since 1997
• Open Airways For Schools teaches children
to take control of their asthma
• However, children cannot control asthma
triggers resulting from indoor air pollution
Condition of America’s Schools
The US Government Accounting Office
estimates that 28,100 schools housing some
15.5 million students, have less than adequate
heating, ventilation and air conditioning
systems. 15,000 schools, housing about 8.4
million students, characterized their air
quality as unsatisfactory.
IAQ TfS Components
Basics
An overview of IAQ
How this Kit is organized
• Who is the IAQ Coordinator
• Who are the team members
• Why IAQ is important
• Understanding problems and solutions
•
IAQ Management Plan
A flexible format for action
• How the IAQ Management Plan works
• 10 steps to activate the Plan
• 19 steps for implementing the Plan
• IAQ Management Plan checklist & log
• Communication do’s and don’ts
Resolving IAQ Problems
How to identify and fix IAQ problems
• Identifying & reacting to emergencies
• The Problem Solving Wheel
• Problem Solving checklist
• Crisis communication
Appendices
Additional supporting information
• Hiring outside help if needed
• Developing IAQ policies
• Information on specific pollutants
• Resources for additional information
IAQ Checklists
Teachers
Building Maintenance
Administrative Staff
Food Service
Health Officer
Waste Management
Ventilation
Renovation and Repairs
IAQ TfS Implementation
• About 60 local Lung Associations actively
promoting IAQ Tools for Schools
• Since 2000, involved in successful
implementation in over 600 schools
• Cleveland, Dallas and Denver Public
Schools are implementing OAS and TfS
• LA Unified and Boston have adopted a
district wide resolutions calling for the
adoption of both programs
Asthma-Friendly Schools Initiative
• Use a coordinated community approach to
the school asthma management program
• Provide appropriate school health services
• Provide asthma education and awareness
• Provide a healthy school environment
• Provide students with asthma with
appropriate daily physical activity
AFSI Community-based Approach
•
•
•
•
Involve parents and students
Involve community healthcare providers
Involve community asthma programs
Involve school and community social
support systems
• Facilitate linkages with students’ medical
home
AFSI School Health Services
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Provide a fill time registered school nurse
Identify and track all students with asthma
Use Asthma Action Plans
Assure access to medications
Use standard emergency protocols
Assure access to a consulting physician
Provide intensive case management as
needed
AFSI Asthma Education
• Educate all school personnel, including bus
drivers
• Educate students with asthma
• Educate parents
• Provide asthma awareness education to all
students
AFSI Healthy School Environment
• Assure smoke-free buildings and grounds
• Provide smoking cessation services for
students and staff
• Proactively maintain indoor air quality
• Use Integrated Pest Management
• Manage exposure to high levels of outdoor
air pollution
Appropriate Daily Physical Activity
• Encourage full participation when students
are well
• Assure ready access to pre-medication as
prescribed
• Provide modified activity as needed
• Provide individualized health plan
describing implementation steps for
students Asthma Action Plan
Asthma-Friendly Schools Toolkit
• Targets local Lung Associations and asthma
coalitions
• Customizable
• Helps develop comprehensive asthma
management plan for schools
• Includes strategies for implementation of
plans
Asthma-Friendly Schools Toolkit
• Asthma-Friendly Schools Website
– All forms available for download
• Asthma Incident Report (AIR) database
– Free to school nurses for case
management/tracking of student’s asthma
• CD-ROM
– Contains copy of database, Toolkit, and Forms
• Binder
Asthma-Friendly Schools Toolkit
• Asthma-Friendly Schools Website
– All forms available for download
• Asthma Incident Report (AIR) database
– Free to school nurses for case
management/tracking of student’s asthma
• CD-ROM
– Contains copy of database, Toolkit, and Forms
• Notebook
Coming Soon
• Toolkit to be completed summer of 2003
• Available to all local lung associations and other
agencies upon request
• Validation of the Toolkit
– Four mini-grants to local Lung Associations
– Implement an Asthma-Friendly Schools Program
– Evaluate the program, toolkit, and implementation
process
Master Home Environmentalist
• Home assessment program developed by the
ALA of Washington
• Intensively trained volunteers conduct home
walk-through with checklist
• Focus primarily on mitigation of asthma
triggers
• Evaluation results include long-term behavior
change and anecdotal health improvements
Asthma Educator
Certification Program
• ALA a lead organization in developing the new
nationwide asthma educator certification
program
• National Asthma Educator Certification Board
started offering certification exam this year
• Local Lung Associations conducting exam prep
training courses
Focus on Research
• Asthma Clinical Research Centers
• “Career Ladder” grant support program for young
lung health researchers
• Locally-supported clinical, behavioral and
intervention research
Asthma Clinical Research Centers
• Network conducts large clinical trials
that have direct impact on patient care
and asthma treatment
• Largest clinical network outside of the
pharmaceutical industry
First Published ALA-ACRC Study
Objective:
“Does the flu vaccine make asthma better,
worse or have no effect?”
Asthma and Flu Shot Findings
“The inactivated influenza vaccine is safe to
administer to adults and children with
asthma, including those with severe
asthma. Given the morbidity of influenza,
all those with asthma should receive the
vaccine annually.”
N Engl J Med 2001;345:1529-36
Ongoing ACRC Investigations
• Genetic Basis of Asthma
– Are genes a cause of asthma; do they modify asthma or do they affect a
patient’s response to asthma medication?
• Monitoring Lung Function After Flu Vaccine
– Are changes in lung function following the flu vaccine better calculated
through a device called an airwatch spirometer, which measures FEV1?
• Diet and Influenza Vaccine
– What is the link between diet and asthma severity?
• Corticosteroids and the Flu Vaccine
– What are the long-term effect of corticosteriods on the immune
system’s response to the flu vaccine?
• Risk Stratification
– What are specific patient characteristics associated with increased risk
of asthma exacerbations?
ALA Working With Partners
• State and local health, environmental, social
service and education agencies
• Health care providers
• Schools
• Academic institutions
• Environmental organizations
• Community groups
Lung disease is the third leading cause of death in America.
Over the last decade, the death rate from lung disease has been
growing faster than the rate from almost any other leading killer.
Since 1904, the American Lung Association has been fighting lung
disease through education, community service, advocacy, and
research. We are working to help those who suffer from lung disease
today, and to stop the spread of lung disease tomorrow.
To succeed, we need your support. Contact your local Lung Association
to find out how you can join the fight.