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Personalising care of adults with asthma from Asia: a modified e-Dephi consensus study to inform management tailored to attitude and control profiles

REALISE Asia—an online questionnaire-based study of Asian asthma patients—identified five patient clusters defined in terms of their control status and attitude towards their asthma (categorised as: ‘Well-adjusted and at least partly controlled’; ‘In denial about symptoms’; ‘Tolerating with poor con...

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Autores principales: Chisholm, Alison, Price, David B, Pinnock, Hilary, Lee, Tan Tze, Roa, Camilo, Cho, Sang-Heon, David-Wang, Aileen, Wong, Gary, van der Molen, Thys, Ryan, Dermot, Castillo-Carandang, Nina, Yong, Yee Vern
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5215112/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28055000
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/npjpcrm.2016.89
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author Chisholm, Alison
Price, David B
Pinnock, Hilary
Lee, Tan Tze
Roa, Camilo
Cho, Sang-Heon
David-Wang, Aileen
Wong, Gary
van der Molen, Thys
Ryan, Dermot
Castillo-Carandang, Nina
Yong, Yee Vern
author_facet Chisholm, Alison
Price, David B
Pinnock, Hilary
Lee, Tan Tze
Roa, Camilo
Cho, Sang-Heon
David-Wang, Aileen
Wong, Gary
van der Molen, Thys
Ryan, Dermot
Castillo-Carandang, Nina
Yong, Yee Vern
author_sort Chisholm, Alison
collection PubMed
description REALISE Asia—an online questionnaire-based study of Asian asthma patients—identified five patient clusters defined in terms of their control status and attitude towards their asthma (categorised as: ‘Well-adjusted and at least partly controlled’; ‘In denial about symptoms’; ‘Tolerating with poor control’; ‘Adrift and poorly controlled’; ‘Worried with multiple symptoms’). We developed consensus recommendations for tailoring management of these attitudinal–control clusters. An expert panel undertook a three-round electronic Delphi (e-Delphi): Round 1: panellists received descriptions of the attitudinal–control clusters and provided free text recommendations for their assessment and management. Round 2: panellists prioritised Round 1 recommendations and met (or joined a teleconference) to consolidate the recommendations. Round 3: panellists voted and prioritised the remaining recommendations. Consensus was defined as Round 3 recommendations endorsed by >50% of panellists. Highest priority recommendations were those receiving the highest score. The multidisciplinary panellists (9 clinicians, 1 pharmacist and 1 health social scientist; 7 from Asia) identified consensus recommendations for all clusters. Recommended pharmacological (e.g., step-up/down; self-management; simplified regimen) and non-pharmacological approaches (e.g., trigger management, education, social support; inhaler technique) varied substantially according to each cluster’s attitude to asthma and associated psychosocial drivers of behaviour. The attitudinal–control clusters defined by REALISE Asia resonated with the international panel. Consensus was reached on appropriate tailored management approaches for all clusters. Summarised and incorporated into a structured management pathway, these recommendations could facilitate personalised care. Generalisability of these patient clusters should be assessed in other socio-economic, cultural and literacy groups and nationalities in Asia.
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spelling pubmed-52151122017-01-18 Personalising care of adults with asthma from Asia: a modified e-Dephi consensus study to inform management tailored to attitude and control profiles Chisholm, Alison Price, David B Pinnock, Hilary Lee, Tan Tze Roa, Camilo Cho, Sang-Heon David-Wang, Aileen Wong, Gary van der Molen, Thys Ryan, Dermot Castillo-Carandang, Nina Yong, Yee Vern NPJ Prim Care Respir Med Article REALISE Asia—an online questionnaire-based study of Asian asthma patients—identified five patient clusters defined in terms of their control status and attitude towards their asthma (categorised as: ‘Well-adjusted and at least partly controlled’; ‘In denial about symptoms’; ‘Tolerating with poor control’; ‘Adrift and poorly controlled’; ‘Worried with multiple symptoms’). We developed consensus recommendations for tailoring management of these attitudinal–control clusters. An expert panel undertook a three-round electronic Delphi (e-Delphi): Round 1: panellists received descriptions of the attitudinal–control clusters and provided free text recommendations for their assessment and management. Round 2: panellists prioritised Round 1 recommendations and met (or joined a teleconference) to consolidate the recommendations. Round 3: panellists voted and prioritised the remaining recommendations. Consensus was defined as Round 3 recommendations endorsed by >50% of panellists. Highest priority recommendations were those receiving the highest score. The multidisciplinary panellists (9 clinicians, 1 pharmacist and 1 health social scientist; 7 from Asia) identified consensus recommendations for all clusters. Recommended pharmacological (e.g., step-up/down; self-management; simplified regimen) and non-pharmacological approaches (e.g., trigger management, education, social support; inhaler technique) varied substantially according to each cluster’s attitude to asthma and associated psychosocial drivers of behaviour. The attitudinal–control clusters defined by REALISE Asia resonated with the international panel. Consensus was reached on appropriate tailored management approaches for all clusters. Summarised and incorporated into a structured management pathway, these recommendations could facilitate personalised care. Generalisability of these patient clusters should be assessed in other socio-economic, cultural and literacy groups and nationalities in Asia. Nature Publishing Group 2017-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC5215112/ /pubmed/28055000 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/npjpcrm.2016.89 Text en Copyright © 2017 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Article
Chisholm, Alison
Price, David B
Pinnock, Hilary
Lee, Tan Tze
Roa, Camilo
Cho, Sang-Heon
David-Wang, Aileen
Wong, Gary
van der Molen, Thys
Ryan, Dermot
Castillo-Carandang, Nina
Yong, Yee Vern
Personalising care of adults with asthma from Asia: a modified e-Dephi consensus study to inform management tailored to attitude and control profiles
title Personalising care of adults with asthma from Asia: a modified e-Dephi consensus study to inform management tailored to attitude and control profiles
title_full Personalising care of adults with asthma from Asia: a modified e-Dephi consensus study to inform management tailored to attitude and control profiles
title_fullStr Personalising care of adults with asthma from Asia: a modified e-Dephi consensus study to inform management tailored to attitude and control profiles
title_full_unstemmed Personalising care of adults with asthma from Asia: a modified e-Dephi consensus study to inform management tailored to attitude and control profiles
title_short Personalising care of adults with asthma from Asia: a modified e-Dephi consensus study to inform management tailored to attitude and control profiles
title_sort personalising care of adults with asthma from asia: a modified e-dephi consensus study to inform management tailored to attitude and control profiles
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5215112/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28055000
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/npjpcrm.2016.89
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