Cargando…

Preventing and lessening exacerbations of asthma in school-age children associated with a new term (PLEASANT): study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial

BACKGROUND: Within the UK, during September, there is a pronounced increase in the number of unscheduled medical contacts by school-aged children (4–16 years) with asthma. It is thought that that this might be caused by the return back to school after the summer holidays, suddenly mixing with other...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Horspool, Michelle J, Julious, Steven A, Boote, Jonathan, Bradburn, Mike J, Cooper, Cindy L, Davis, Sarah, Elphick, Heather, Norman, Paul, Smithson, W Henry, vanStaa, Tjeerd
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4016495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24041259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-14-297
_version_ 1782315505959305216
author Horspool, Michelle J
Julious, Steven A
Boote, Jonathan
Bradburn, Mike J
Cooper, Cindy L
Davis, Sarah
Elphick, Heather
Norman, Paul
Smithson, W Henry
vanStaa, Tjeerd
author_facet Horspool, Michelle J
Julious, Steven A
Boote, Jonathan
Bradburn, Mike J
Cooper, Cindy L
Davis, Sarah
Elphick, Heather
Norman, Paul
Smithson, W Henry
vanStaa, Tjeerd
author_sort Horspool, Michelle J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Within the UK, during September, there is a pronounced increase in the number of unscheduled medical contacts by school-aged children (4–16 years) with asthma. It is thought that that this might be caused by the return back to school after the summer holidays, suddenly mixing with other children again and picking up viruses which could affect their asthma. There is also a drop in the number of prescriptions administered in August. It is possible therefore that children might not be taking their medication as they should during the summer contributing to them becoming ill when they return to school. It is hoped that a simple intervention from the GP to parents of children with asthma at the start of the summer holiday period, highlighting the importance of maintaining asthma medication can help prevent increased asthma exacerbation, and unscheduled NHS appointments, following return to school in September. METHODS/DESIGN: PLEASANT is a cluster randomised trial. A total of 140 General Practices (GPs) will be recruited into the trial; 70 GPs randomised to the intervention and 70 control practices of “usual care”. An average practice is expected to have approximately 100 children (aged 4–16 with a diagnosis of asthma) hence observational data will be collected on around 14000 children over a 24-month period. The Clinical Practice Research Datalink will collect all data required for the study which includes diagnostic, prescription and referral data. DISCUSSION: The trial will assess whether the intervention can reduce exacerbation of asthma and unscheduled medical contacts in school-aged children associated with the return to school after the summer holidays. It has the potential to benefit the health and quality of life of children with asthma while also improving the effectiveness of NHS services by reducing NHS use in one of the busiest months of the year. An exploratory health economic analysis will gauge any cost saving associated with the intervention and subsequent impacts on quality of life. If results for the intervention are positive it is hoped that this could be adopted as part of routine care management of childhood asthma in general practice. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current controlled trials: ISRCTN03000938 (assigned 19/10/12) http://www.controlled-trials.com/ISRCTN03000938/. UKCRN ID: 13572
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4016495
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-40164952014-05-11 Preventing and lessening exacerbations of asthma in school-age children associated with a new term (PLEASANT): study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial Horspool, Michelle J Julious, Steven A Boote, Jonathan Bradburn, Mike J Cooper, Cindy L Davis, Sarah Elphick, Heather Norman, Paul Smithson, W Henry vanStaa, Tjeerd Trials Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Within the UK, during September, there is a pronounced increase in the number of unscheduled medical contacts by school-aged children (4–16 years) with asthma. It is thought that that this might be caused by the return back to school after the summer holidays, suddenly mixing with other children again and picking up viruses which could affect their asthma. There is also a drop in the number of prescriptions administered in August. It is possible therefore that children might not be taking their medication as they should during the summer contributing to them becoming ill when they return to school. It is hoped that a simple intervention from the GP to parents of children with asthma at the start of the summer holiday period, highlighting the importance of maintaining asthma medication can help prevent increased asthma exacerbation, and unscheduled NHS appointments, following return to school in September. METHODS/DESIGN: PLEASANT is a cluster randomised trial. A total of 140 General Practices (GPs) will be recruited into the trial; 70 GPs randomised to the intervention and 70 control practices of “usual care”. An average practice is expected to have approximately 100 children (aged 4–16 with a diagnosis of asthma) hence observational data will be collected on around 14000 children over a 24-month period. The Clinical Practice Research Datalink will collect all data required for the study which includes diagnostic, prescription and referral data. DISCUSSION: The trial will assess whether the intervention can reduce exacerbation of asthma and unscheduled medical contacts in school-aged children associated with the return to school after the summer holidays. It has the potential to benefit the health and quality of life of children with asthma while also improving the effectiveness of NHS services by reducing NHS use in one of the busiest months of the year. An exploratory health economic analysis will gauge any cost saving associated with the intervention and subsequent impacts on quality of life. If results for the intervention are positive it is hoped that this could be adopted as part of routine care management of childhood asthma in general practice. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current controlled trials: ISRCTN03000938 (assigned 19/10/12) http://www.controlled-trials.com/ISRCTN03000938/. UKCRN ID: 13572 BioMed Central 2013-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4016495/ /pubmed/24041259 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-14-297 Text en Copyright © 2013 Horspool et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Horspool, Michelle J
Julious, Steven A
Boote, Jonathan
Bradburn, Mike J
Cooper, Cindy L
Davis, Sarah
Elphick, Heather
Norman, Paul
Smithson, W Henry
vanStaa, Tjeerd
Preventing and lessening exacerbations of asthma in school-age children associated with a new term (PLEASANT): study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial
title Preventing and lessening exacerbations of asthma in school-age children associated with a new term (PLEASANT): study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial
title_full Preventing and lessening exacerbations of asthma in school-age children associated with a new term (PLEASANT): study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial
title_fullStr Preventing and lessening exacerbations of asthma in school-age children associated with a new term (PLEASANT): study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial
title_full_unstemmed Preventing and lessening exacerbations of asthma in school-age children associated with a new term (PLEASANT): study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial
title_short Preventing and lessening exacerbations of asthma in school-age children associated with a new term (PLEASANT): study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial
title_sort preventing and lessening exacerbations of asthma in school-age children associated with a new term (pleasant): study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4016495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24041259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-14-297
work_keys_str_mv AT horspoolmichellej preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial
AT juliousstevena preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial
AT bootejonathan preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial
AT bradburnmikej preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial
AT coopercindyl preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial
AT davissarah preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial
AT elphickheather preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial
AT normanpaul preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial
AT smithsonwhenry preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial
AT vanstaatjeerd preventingandlesseningexacerbationsofasthmainschoolagechildrenassociatedwithanewtermpleasantstudyprotocolforaclusterrandomisedcontroltrial