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Title: Discussions between medical providers and children/caregivers about the benefits of asthma-control medications. Author: Gillette C, Blalock SJ, Rao JK, Williams D, Loughlin C, Sleath B. Journal: J Am Pharm Assoc (2003); 2014; 54(3):251-7. PubMed ID: 24816351. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To describe the content of discussions between general pediatric providers and children and their caregivers about the benefits of asthma-control medication; describe the extent to which these discussions occur; and examine factors that are associated with medication benefit discussions. DESIGN: Cross-sectional secondary analysis of audiotaped medical visits. SETTING: Five primary care pediatric clinics in North Carolina. PARTICIPANTS: 35 pediatric providers and 248 children with persistent asthma and their caregivers. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Presence of discussion about benefits associated with asthma-control medications. RESULTS: Providers discussed benefits associated with asthma-control medications during 56% of medical visits. Benefits were more likely to be discussed when the child was younger and when medication adherence was discussed during the visit. When providers discussed benefits of asthma-control medications, they were most likely to ask questions and make statements regarding symptom control/prevention. CONCLUSION: General pediatric medical providers often do not discuss the benefits of asthma-control medications. Pharmacists could fill this information gap by counseling both children and their caregivers about benefits that a child with asthma can expect as a result of treatment.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]