Wiki as an Innovative New tool for Developing individual Asthma Action Plans

Rather than give you a set of instructions about what to do if you have an Asthma attack, what if your doctor invites you to help write them?

Would that make patients feel more engaged and empowered in managing their health care, and would that ultimately make them happier if not healthier?

These questions are being raised by Dr. Samir Gupta, a respirologist at St. Michael’s Hospital.

His research has found that a wiki – a website developed collaboratively by a community of users, allowing any user to add and edit content – can be an innovative new tool for developing individual asthma action plans.

“We’ve introduced a new way of getting patients engaged in developing tools that might improve their health,” Dr. Gupta said. “We’re empowering patients, involving patients in the health care process.”

Dr. Gupta said a lot of asthma action plans – a one-page set of instructions for managing a patient’s asthma – are developed by experts without input from patients or the clinics that distribute them. When they are difficult to read or understand, patients don’t follow them, especially these days when health care providers face competition from such things as the Internet and iPad apps for patients’ attention.

He got together a group of respirologists, patients, family doctors and asthma educators, set up a wiki and allowed them to choose their own content, fonts, colour and design for an asthma action plan. There were also voting mechanisms to select choices and a blog to explain them. Participants could log on as often as they wanted.

He said the results were collaborative and without the frequent hierarchical issues that can define the patient-doctor relationship.

“People were very engaged,” he said. “People logged on regularly and all the time. There were lots of comments, lots of rich discussion. The end results were highly useful.”

Dr. Gupta said this method of decision-making could be used in other medical fields, as well as in marketing, where consumers could have a role.

Dr. Gupta’s study on wikis for asthma action plans appeared in a recent issue of the Journal of Medical Internet Research.

Premature by 2 to 3 weeks may raise risk for health issues: Study – News-Medical.net


The Guardian

Premature by 2 to 3 weeks may raise risk for health issues: Study
News-Medical.net
By Dr Ananya Mandal, MD A new study shows that babies born even just a few weeks early are more likely to suffer from poor health, including asthma. Premature babies have always thought to be at risk of health issues but till now the health prospects
Babies born a few weeks early 'suffer health risks'The Guardian
Infancy health risk linked to early birth by researchPakTribune.com
Being born even slightly early carried greater risk of illnessNHS Choices
Bahrain News Agency –Active Quote
all 131 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News

New outcome measures may reduce disparities in children with asthma – News-Medical.net

New outcome measures may reduce disparities in children with asthma
News-Medical.net
Newly proposed asthma outcome measures will help standardize and improve results from the hundreds of millions of dollars the National Institutes of Health (NIH) spends annually to study asthma, according to the Merck Childhood Asthma Network,
Standardized outcome measures proposed for asthma clinical researchScience Codex

all 8 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Strong link between BMI and asthma in Hispanic youth – News-Medical.net

Strong link between BMI and asthma in Hispanic youth
News-Medical.net
Children and adolescents who are overweight or obese are more likely to have asthma than their healthy weight counterparts, according to a new Kaiser Permanente Southern California study published in the online edition of Obesity.
Kaiser Permanente Study Finds Obesity-Asthma Link in Children Varies by Race MarketWatch (press release)

all 12 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News

ACAAI, Teva Respiratory partner to bring free asthma screenings nationwide – News-Medical.net

ACAAI, Teva Respiratory partner to bring free asthma screenings nationwide
News-Medical.net
The American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI) recognizes Teva Respiratory for its continued leadership and support of important educational issues related to respiratory health, particularly under diagnosed and poorly managed asthma

and more »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Asthmatic mothers encouraged to breastfeed without fear as it boosts baby’s … – News-Medical.net

Asthmatic mothers encouraged to breastfeed without fear as it boosts baby's
News-Medical.net
Children whose moms had asthma and were breastfed for four months or longer also performed better in tests measuring lung capacity, suggesting breastfeeding could lower the risk of asthma. The findings appear to contradict several earlier studies that

and more »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Combination of ICS and LABA appears to reduce severe asthma attacks – News-Medical.net

Combination of ICS and LABA appears to reduce severe asthma attacks
News-Medical.net
A Henry Ford Hospital study has found that using two types of common asthma medications in combination reduces severe asthma attacks. Researchers say using long-acting beta-agonists (LABAs) in fixed-dose combination with inhaled corticosteroid (ICS)

and more »

View full post on asthma – Google News