What Parents Want Doctors to Know: Responses to an Open-Ended Item on an Asthma Questionnaire

Unstructured parental comments could solicit important information about children's asthma, yet are rarely captured in clinical asthma questionnaires. This mixed-methods study describes parents’ written responses to an open-ended question in a validated asthma questionnaire. The Pediatric Asthm...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic pediatrics 2022-05, Vol.22 (4), p.657-666
Hauptverfasser: Delgado-Martinez, Roxana, Barry, Melanie Frances, Porras-Javier, Lorena, Thompson, Lindsey R., Howard, Barbara J., Sturner, Raymond, Halterman, Jill S., Szilagyi, Peter G., Okelo, Sande O., Dudovitz, Rebecca N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Unstructured parental comments could solicit important information about children's asthma, yet are rarely captured in clinical asthma questionnaires. This mixed-methods study describes parents’ written responses to an open-ended question in a validated asthma questionnaire. The Pediatric Asthma Control and Communication Instrument (PACCI) asthma questionnaire was administered to parents of children with asthma symptoms presenting to 48 pediatric primary care offices (PPCP), 1 pediatric pulmonology office, and 1 emergency department (ED). Responses to the question, “Please write down any concern or anything else you would like your doctor to know about your child's asthma” were analyzed using a phenomenological approach until thematic saturation was achieved for each site. Logistic regressions tested whether sociodemographic and clinical characteristics were associated with responding to the open-ended question. Of 7,988 parents who completed the PACCI, 954 (12%) responded to the open-ended question—2% in PPCP, 31% in the ED, and 50% in the pulmonary setting. More severe asthma was associated with higher odds of responding (odds ratio, 2.01; 95% confidence interval, 1.42–2.84). Based on responses provided, we identified 3 communication types: 1) clarifying symptoms, 2) asking questions, and 3) communicating distress. Responses also covered 5 asthma-related themes: 1) diagnostic uncertainty, 2) understanding asthma etiology and prognosis, 3) medication management, 4) impact on child function, and 5) personal asthma characteristics. Parents of children with severe asthma provided clarifying details, asked questions, and relayed health concerns and distress. None of these topics may be easily captured by closed-ended asthma questionnaires.
ISSN:1876-2859
1876-2867
DOI:10.1016/j.acap.2021.11.007