430
Participants
Start Date
April 1, 2024
Primary Completion Date
March 31, 2028
Study Completion Date
June 30, 2028
Telehealth-Enhanced Asthma Care for Home After the Emergency Room (TEACH-ER)
TEACH-ER aims to provide primary care management and educational support for families managing childhood asthma throughout the transition from emergency department to home, and includes several core components: 1) brief, pictorial, and health literacy-informed asthma education in the ED, with color- and shape-coded labels provided for home asthma medications; 2) virtual primary care follow-up within 1 week of discharge using in-home telemedicine (when possible), featuring provider prompts for guideline-based preventive therapy and home delivery of prescribed medications with pictorial action plans; 3) two additional in-home virtual visits to reinforce teaching, review treatment plans, label medications, and support effective management practices. Virtual visits will be completed using the Zoom platform on smartphones or other compatible devices. We anticipate that all three telehealth visits (1 provider visit, 2 educator visits) will be completed within 2 months of enrollment.
Enhanced Care (EC)
Similar to children in the TEACH-ER group, participants in the EC group will receive a symptom assessment using NHLBI guidelines, a recommendation for appropriate preventive medications, and asthma education materials given at the time of the ED visit. After baseline and randomization, we will send the child's PCP a symptom report with guideline-based recommendations for preventive care and recommend a follow-up visit with the PCP. We will also give all providers a summary of the current national guidelines. We will provide systematic feedback to the family and child's PCP at intervals that parallel the TEACH-ER group's telemedicine assessments. This feedback will include prompting caregivers to schedule a recommended follow-up appointment with the PCP, and encouraging providers to adhere to the NHLBI guidelines. While participants will not be blinded to their group allocation, they will be told that they are randomly assigned to two different ways of approaching asthma management.
RECRUITING
University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
NIH
University of Rochester
OTHER