The Efficacy of CAMP Air, a Web-based Asthma Intervention, Among Urban Adolescents with Uncontrolled Asthma

Project: Research project

Project Details

Description

PROJECT SUMMARY / ABSTRACT Background and Rationale: Asthma has high prevalence and morbidity among minority adolescents. Yet, few interventions are tested in adolescents, with only one being web-based. Given asthma's significant impact on this group, and the important role technology plays in their lives, this oversight is a significant public health concern. There is a dearth of cost-effectiveness analyses and implementation studies in asthma intervention research. This study addresses these treatment and methodological gaps. We developed and established the preliminary impact of the Controlling Asthma Program for Adolescents (CAMP Air), a seven-module personalized, e-health intervention for adolescents with uncontrolled asthma. Objective: We aim to: (1) systematically evaluate CAMP Air's efficacy in 370 urban adolescents with uncontrolled asthma; (2) assess its cost-effectiveness; and (3) identify multi-level factors associated with successful implementation of CAMP Air to inform its future scale-up. Hypotheses: Relative to controls, over 1-year CAMP Air participants will have significantly better asthma control as indicated by (a) higher scores on the Asthma Control Test (ACT) and (b) fewer asthma-related urgent care visits (primary outcomes). CAMP Air participants will also have significantly better (a) asthma self-care skills, (b) controller medication use, (c) lung function (measured by spirometry), and (d) quality of life; and significantly lower rates of (e) steroid bursts, (f) symptoms days, (g) nights woken, (h) activity limitations, and (i) school absences. We hypothesize that compared to the control, CAMP Air will have favorable value (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio
StatusFinished
Effective start/end date8/10/226/30/23

Funding

  • National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: US$794,332.00

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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