Patterns of Asthma Medication Use across the Transition to High School

Author:

McQuaid Elizabeth L1ORCID,Kopel Sheryl J2,Seifer Ronald3,Tackett Alayna4,Farrow Michael5,Koinis-Mitchell Daphne1,Dunsiger Shira6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Department of Pediatrics, Alpert Medical School, Brown University

2. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Alpert Medical School, Brown University

3. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute

4. Department of Preventive Medicine, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Institute for Addiction Science

5. Department of Psychology, University of Hartford

6. Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health

Abstract

Abstract Objective Adherence to asthma controller medications is suboptimal among adolescents. We evaluated predictors of adherence and longitudinal patterns of medication use between 8th and 10th grade among a sample of youth of diverse race/ethnicity. Methods Eighth graders with asthma on controller medications (N = 62; 40.0% non-Latino white; 23.7% Black; 37.3% Latino; 37.3% female) completed measures of medication beliefs, responsibility for asthma management, and family cohesion. Objective methods tracked medication use longitudinally. Results Adherence declined during the high school transition, from 48.0% in eighth grade to 34.1% in tenth grade (F = 5.35, p < .01). Males had lower adherence (b = −10.11, SE = 5.37, p = .02, f2 = 0.11), as did Latino youth (b = −12.21, SE = 8.23, p = .03, f2 = 0.12). Family cohesion was associated with higher adherence (b = 4.38, SE = 1.98, p = .04, f2 = 0.06). Latent class models (LCMs) suggested a three-class model of longitudinal adherence patterns. This included low, declining adherence (Class 1 = 29%; higher proportion male, p = .02), high, sustained adherence (Class 2 = 26%, high family cohesion, p = .05, higher proportion female, p = .02), and low, sustained adherence (Class 3 = 45%; higher proportion Latino, p = .05, higher proportion male, p = .02). Conclusions Asthma medication adherence declined between 8th and 10th grade. LCMs indicated some youth have stable patterns of adherence (high or low), whereas others demonstrate declines. Gender differences were observed, and family cohesion was associated with higher, sustained adherence. Interventions building on family resources and targeting the barriers adolescents face are necessary to improve asthma management during this vulnerable period.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Hassenfeld Children’s Health Innovation Institute of Brown University

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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