A response to COVID-19 school closures: The feasibility of a school-linked text message intervention as an adaptation to school-supervised asthma therapy
Authors
Arenas, JulianaBecker, Sarah
Seay, Hannah
Frisard, Christine
Hoque, Shushmita
Spano, Michelle
Lindenauer, Peter K.
Sadasivam, Rajani S.
Pbert, Lori
Trivedi, Michelle
Faculty Advisor
Michelle TrivediUMass Chan Affiliations
School of MedicineDepartment of Medicine
Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pulmonary Medicine
Document Type
Journal ArticlePublication Date
2022-02-01Keywords
COVID-19asthma
medication adherence
school health services
text messaging
Community Health and Preventive Medicine
Health Information Technology
Pediatrics
Preventive Medicine
Pulmonology
Respiratory Tract Diseases
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
BACKGROUND: School-supervised asthma therapy improves asthma medication adherence and morbidity, particularly among low-income and underrepresented minority (URM) children. However, COVID-19-related school closures abruptly suspended this therapy. In response, we developed a school-linked text message intervention. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of the study is to investigate the feasibility and acceptability of a school-linked text message intervention. METHODS: In December 2020, children previously enrolled in school-supervised asthma therapy in Central Massachusetts were recruited into this school-linked text message intervention. We sent two-way, automated, daily text reminders in English or Spanish to caregivers of these children, asking if they had given their child their daily preventive asthma medicine. Our study team notified the school nurse if the caregiver did not consistently respond to text messages. School nurses performed weekly remote check-ins with all families. The primary outcome of the study was feasibility: recruitment, retention, and intervention fidelity. Secondarily we examined intervention acceptability and asthma health outcomes. RESULTS: Twenty-six children (54% male, 69% Hispanic, 8% Black, 23% White, 93% Medicaid insured) and their caregivers were enrolled in the intervention with 96% participant retention at 6 months. Caregiver response rate to daily text messages was 81% over the study period. Children experienced significant improvements in asthma health outcomes. The intervention was well accepted by nurses and caregivers. CONCLUSION: A school-linked text messaging intervention for pediatric asthma is feasible and acceptable. This simple, accessible intervention may improve health outcomes for low-income and URM children with asthma. It merits further study as a potential strategy to advance health equity.Source
Arenas J, Becker S, Seay H, Frisard C, Hoque S, Spano M, Lindenauer PK, Sadasivam RS, Pbert L, Trivedi M. A response to COVID-19 school closures: The feasibility of a school-linked text message intervention as an adaptation to school-supervised asthma therapy. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2022 Feb 1. doi: 10.1002/ppul.25851. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 35106970. Link to article on publisher's site
DOI
10.1002/ppul.25851Permanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/44570PubMed ID
35106970Notes
Shushmita Hoque participated in this study as a medical student in the Senior Scholars research program at UMass Chan Medical School.Related Resources
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1002/ppul.25851