142nd APHA Annual Meeting and Exposition

Annual Meeting Recordings are now available for purchase

307772
Where You Live Matters: Combating Asthma Morbidity by Reducing Home Environmental Triggers

142nd APHA Annual Meeting and Exposition (November 15 - November 19, 2014): http://www.apha.org/events-and-meetings/annual
Monday, November 17, 2014

Tala Schwindt, MPH , Sinai Urban Health Institute, Sinai Health System, Chicago, IL
Jessica Ramsay, MPH, AE-C , Sinai Urban Health Institute, Sinai Health Systems, Chicago, IL
Kim Artis , Sinai Urban Health Institute, Sinai Health System, Chicago, IL
Melissa Gutierrez Kapheim, MS , Sinai Urban Health Institute, Sinai Health System, Chicago, IL
Helen Margellos-Anast, MPH , Sinai Urban Health Institute, Sinai Health System, Chicago, IL
Environmental triggers are prevalent in poor, urban communities and negatively impact health outcomes for residents. With funding from the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Sinai Urban Health Institute partnered with the Chicago Housing Authority to implement its Community Health Worker (CHW) asthma and healthy homes intervention in six public housing developments. The home-based intervention addresses asthma disparities by educating families to better manage asthma, while addressing the presence of indoor environmental exposures. These exposures, including cockroaches, rodents, mold, dust-mites, tobacco smoke, and pets, create physical stressors that can lead to airway inflammation, resulting in increased asthma morbidity. Adults enrolled in the program received four visits over six months and children received six visits over one year. A thorough home assessment was conducted at the beginning and end of the program for 60 children and 55 adults who completed the intervention. With the objective of reducing asthma triggers, CHWs helped resolve 60% of the children’s homes that had evidence of cockroaches present at baseline. Furthermore, 83% of children and 73% of adults with evidence of mold in their home at baseline no longer had mold at the end of the intervention. Forty-two percent of adult participants with evidence of tobacco smoke in their home during the baseline visit were smoke-free by their final visit. These improvements in home triggers parallel improvements in asthma severity and health resource utilization. Children realized an 83% decrease in asthma-related emergency department visits while adults saw a 44% decrease.  Daytime asthma symptoms were reduced from 4.1 in the past two weeks to 0.8 among children, and adult symptoms decreased from 5.0 to 2.0. These outcomes indicate the effectiveness of the CHW model in empowering families to reduce the presence of in-home asthma triggers, which in turn reduces asthma morbidity among those most profoundly impacted.

Learning Areas:

Advocacy for health and health education
Chronic disease management and prevention
Environmental health sciences
Implementation of health education strategies, interventions and programs

Learning Objectives:
List the key indoor environmental exposures that trigger asthma. Discuss the unique nature of the CHW model, and why it is successful at reducing asthma-related disparities associated with living conditions of poor, urban communities. Identify ways to evaluate the effectiveness of an asthma and healthy homes intervention at reducing home asthma triggers and asthma morbidity.

Keyword(s): Asthma, Air Pollution & Respiratory Health

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I'm the evaluator for the asthma interventions at the Sinai Urban Health Institute (SUHI) and analyzed the environmental and outcomes data for this abstract. In general, I lead statistical analysis activites for reports, manuscripts and grants as well as direct process and outcome evaluation for ongoing asthma programs at SUHI. I am also presently the Research Director on a CHW asthma and healthy homes program recently funded by the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.