Can Education for South Asians With Asthma and Their Clinicians Reduce Unscheduled Care? A Randomised Trial

PHASE1CompletedINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

375

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

November 30, 2005

Primary Completion Date

April 30, 2008

Study Completion Date

April 30, 2009

Conditions
Asthma
Interventions
BEHAVIORAL

PACE (Professional Asthma Care Education)

Education for intervention specialist nurse and GPs and practice nurses from intervention practices, using our adaptation of Clarke's self-regulation education programme, designed to improve shared-decision making, goal-setting and patient-clinician partnership.

BEHAVIORAL

Lay Led Expert Patient Programme

Lay-led 'expert-patient' education in small groups for patients, using an adaptation of Stanford University's chronic disease self-management programme.

BEHAVIORAL

Asthma self management education by a specialist nurse

asthma education and self management, asthma action plans

Trial Locations (1)

E1 4NS

Barts and TheLondon, Queen Marys's School of Medicine and Dentistry, London

Sponsors

Collaborators (1)

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

Asthma UK

OTHER

collaborator

Social Action for Health

UNKNOWN

collaborator

Department of Health (Service Support - host acute/community)

UNKNOWN

collaborator

Noreen Clarke, Professor of Public Health, Michigan University

OTHER

lead

Barts & The London NHS Trust

OTHER

NCT00214669 - Can Education for South Asians With Asthma and Their Clinicians Reduce Unscheduled Care? A Randomised Trial | Biotech Hunter | Biotech Hunter