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Houston "Breathe Easy" Healthy Homes-Based Model for Multifamily Rental Communities

Not Applicable
Conditions
Respiratory Tract Disease
Sinusitis, Chronic
Asthma
Lung Diseases
Interventions
Behavioral: Exposure-Reduction Intervention
Registration Number
NCT05345080
Lead Sponsor
Baylor College of Medicine
Brief Summary

The primary purpose of this pragmatic randomized clinical trial is to examine whether the addition of a phone-based multicomponent environmental intervention customized for Houston public housing residents with asthma will result in statistically significant improvements in key measures of health, quality of life, and resilience.

Detailed Description

This is a pragmatic randomized clinical trial that examines the effectiveness of a clinically informed phone-based environmental intervention for improving asthma control in individuals living in selected Houston Housing Authority public housing communities. This study was initially designed as an in-home intervention but changed to a phone-based intervention, with drop-offs of supplies and other materials, because of the coronavirus pandemic. Both the control and intervention groups complete a comprehensive set of questionnaires by phone (or online or on paper), and wear a passive wristband collection device for seven days that measures exposure to 1,530 chemicals. Each enrollee is randomly assigned into one of the two groups after the baseline questionnaires are completed. The intervention ("exposure-reduction") group receives a telehealth visit, a customized Multicomponent Asthma Action Plan, multiple phone-based intervention visits and customized exposure-reduction supplies and materials, delivered to their porch, to implement the plan and support behavior change. The exposure-reduction group is encouraged to provide a blood sample to a local Harris Health laboratory for analysis of allergic and eosinophilic status. The control ("phone-call-only") group receives phone follow-up calls. Six months after the baseline assessment, both groups are reassessed at the exit visit. The phone-call-only group receives the exposure-reduction intervention after the exit visit.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
28
Inclusion Criteria
  • 18 years of age or older

  • Diagnosis of poorly controlled asthma*

  • Live in one of the selected public housing communities operated by the Houston Housing Authority

  • No clear plan to move within the next 6 months

  • Working telephone number

  • Able to read and speak in English

    • Poorly controlled asthma defined as (1) has been diagnosed by a physician as having asthma in the past and currently has asthma; and (2) fulfills one or more of the following criteria of poorly controlled asthma: has had one or more emergency department visits or hospitalizations for asthma in the preceding year; has had asthma symptoms during the daytime at least two days in the past week; has been awoken at night by asthma symptoms one or more nights in the past week; or has used asthma rescue medication at least twice in the past week. These eligibility criteria effectively include two categories of asthma control as defined by the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program, (NAEPP) Third Expert Panel (EPR3) on the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma: "not well controlled" and "very poorly controlled" asthma.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Severe co-morbid conditions--such as a poorly controlled psychiatric illness or a condition requiring intense medical treatment--that could reasonably be expected to (1) confound the effects of this study's intervention or (2) make it unlikely that a participant could follow the treatment plan.
  • A concurrent pulmonary study that could reasonably be expected to confound the effects of the intervention.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Exposure-Reduction Intervention GroupExposure-Reduction InterventionThe exposure-reduction (intervention) group receives a phone-based telehealth visit, collection of self-report information from detailed health and exposure questionnaires, asthma education, assessment for allergies (optional), a customized asthma self-management plan and support developed using motivational interviewing methods, and a customized selection of supplies to help reduce key exposures likely exacerbating asthma symptoms.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Juniper Mini Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (MiniAQLQ) ScoreMeasured at baseline and 6 months later

A validated 15-item questionnaire, with each question having seven possible answers score from 1 (worst) to 7 (best). Minimum total score is 15 (worst asthma quality of life). Maximum total score is 105 (best asthma quality of life). By design, an individual's score is reported as the mean (total score/15). Thus the possible mean reported score ranges from 1 (worst asthma quality of life) to 7 (best asthma quality of life).

Change in Asthma Control Test (ACT) ScoreMeasured at baseline and 6 months later

The ACT is a validated 5-question scale assessing asthma control over the previous four weeks. Each question has five possible responses, from 1 (worst) to 5 (best). The total score ranges from 5 (worst control) to 25 (best control). In general, a total score of 19 or less suggests poor asthma control.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Emergency Department (ED) VisitsCollected at baseline and 6 months later (for the preceding 6 months)

The healthcare utilization questions were from the validated CDC-BRFSS Asthma Survey. For this outcome measure, patient responses to a question that asked "During the past 6 months, how many times to you visit an emergency room of urgent care center because of your asthma?" were used.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Baylor College of Medicine

🇺🇸

Houston, Texas, United States

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