Abstract

The adult "credit card" asthma self-management plan has been shown to be an effective and acceptable system for reducing asthma morbidity when introduced as part of a 6 month community-based asthma programme. The aim of the present study was to assess the effectiveness of the credit card plan 2 yrs after the end of the programme. Markers of asthma morbidity and use of medical services were compared during the 12 months before enrolment, and 2 yrs after completing the 6 month asthma programme. Of the 69 participants who originally enroled in the 6 month asthma programme, 58 were surveyed 2 yrs after completion of the programme. These participants showed a significant improvement in all but one of the asthma morbidity measures. The proportion waking most nights with asthma in the previous 12 months decreased from 29 to 9% (p=0.02), emergency visits to a general practitioner decreased from 43 to 16% (p=0.001), hospital emergency department visits with asthma decreased from 19 to 5% (p=0.02) and hospital admissions decreased from 17 to 5% (p=0.04). Only 24% of patients reported that they usually monitored their peak flow rate daily, but this increased to 73% during a "bad" attack of asthma. A long-term reduction in asthma morbidity and requirement for acute medical services can result following the introduction of the adult credit card asthma self-management plan. Adult patients with asthma are most likely to undertake peak flow monitoring preferentially during periods of unstable asthma, rather than routinely during periods of good control.

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