Asthma Education Program for First Nations Children: An exemplar of the Knowledge-to-Action Framework

BACKGROUND: The prevalence of asthma in Aboriginal children is 6% to 14%. Gaps in knowledge regarding asthma and its management exist in First Nations (FN) communities, and culturally relevant education and resources are required. Studies have recommended that the children’s asthma education program...

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Published in:Canadian Respiratory Journal
Main Authors: Maureen L Douglas, Shawna L McGhan, Danielle Tougas, Nancy Fenton, Christopher Sarin, Oxana Latycheva, A Dean Befus
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Respiratory Journal 2013
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/260489
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spelling fthindawi:oai:hindawi.com:10.1155/2013/260489 2023-05-15T16:16:04+02:00 Asthma Education Program for First Nations Children: An exemplar of the Knowledge-to-Action Framework Maureen L Douglas Shawna L McGhan Danielle Tougas Nancy Fenton Christopher Sarin Oxana Latycheva A Dean Befus 2013 https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/260489 en eng Canadian Respiratory Journal https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/260489 Copyright © 2013 Hindawi Publishing Corporation. Original Article 2013 fthindawi https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/260489 2019-05-26T06:24:59Z BACKGROUND: The prevalence of asthma in Aboriginal children is 6% to 14%. Gaps in knowledge regarding asthma and its management exist in First Nations (FN) communities, and culturally relevant education and resources are required. Studies have recommended that the children’s asthma education program, the ‘Roaring Adventures of Puff’, be modified through partnership with FN communities to be culturally appropriate.OBJECTIVE: To adapt this knowledge tool and design an effective implementation process for FN knowledge users (children with asthma and care providers), guided by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research knowledge translation framework.METHODS: The problem was identified, knowledge was identified/reviewed/selected (literature review); knowledge was adapted to the local context (FN working and advisory groups); barriers to knowledge use were assessed (by knowledge users); and interventions were selected, tailored and implemented (modified curricula and the creation of a new activity book and web-based resources, and regional coordinators, asthma educator mentors and community teams were recruited).RESULTS: Major outcomes were the adapted tools and blueprints for tailoring implementation. Additional outcomes were preliminary observations and outputs from the iterative processes, including information about local context and barriers. Specific additions were roles for community members supported by asthma educators (applying FN teaching models and addressing health care demands); relevant triggers (addressing knowledge gaps); and FN images and stories, themes of circle, sacred teachings, nature and family/elders (culture and addressing low reading levels).CONCLUSION: The framework model provides a logical, valuable tool for adapting a knowledge tool and implementation process to new knowledge users. Future research should measure uptake, effect on health outcomes of FN asthma sufferers and sustainability. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations Hindawi Publishing Corporation Canadian Respiratory Journal 20 4 295 300
institution Open Polar
collection Hindawi Publishing Corporation
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language English
description BACKGROUND: The prevalence of asthma in Aboriginal children is 6% to 14%. Gaps in knowledge regarding asthma and its management exist in First Nations (FN) communities, and culturally relevant education and resources are required. Studies have recommended that the children’s asthma education program, the ‘Roaring Adventures of Puff’, be modified through partnership with FN communities to be culturally appropriate.OBJECTIVE: To adapt this knowledge tool and design an effective implementation process for FN knowledge users (children with asthma and care providers), guided by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research knowledge translation framework.METHODS: The problem was identified, knowledge was identified/reviewed/selected (literature review); knowledge was adapted to the local context (FN working and advisory groups); barriers to knowledge use were assessed (by knowledge users); and interventions were selected, tailored and implemented (modified curricula and the creation of a new activity book and web-based resources, and regional coordinators, asthma educator mentors and community teams were recruited).RESULTS: Major outcomes were the adapted tools and blueprints for tailoring implementation. Additional outcomes were preliminary observations and outputs from the iterative processes, including information about local context and barriers. Specific additions were roles for community members supported by asthma educators (applying FN teaching models and addressing health care demands); relevant triggers (addressing knowledge gaps); and FN images and stories, themes of circle, sacred teachings, nature and family/elders (culture and addressing low reading levels).CONCLUSION: The framework model provides a logical, valuable tool for adapting a knowledge tool and implementation process to new knowledge users. Future research should measure uptake, effect on health outcomes of FN asthma sufferers and sustainability.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Maureen L Douglas
Shawna L McGhan
Danielle Tougas
Nancy Fenton
Christopher Sarin
Oxana Latycheva
A Dean Befus
spellingShingle Maureen L Douglas
Shawna L McGhan
Danielle Tougas
Nancy Fenton
Christopher Sarin
Oxana Latycheva
A Dean Befus
Asthma Education Program for First Nations Children: An exemplar of the Knowledge-to-Action Framework
author_facet Maureen L Douglas
Shawna L McGhan
Danielle Tougas
Nancy Fenton
Christopher Sarin
Oxana Latycheva
A Dean Befus
author_sort Maureen L Douglas
title Asthma Education Program for First Nations Children: An exemplar of the Knowledge-to-Action Framework
title_short Asthma Education Program for First Nations Children: An exemplar of the Knowledge-to-Action Framework
title_full Asthma Education Program for First Nations Children: An exemplar of the Knowledge-to-Action Framework
title_fullStr Asthma Education Program for First Nations Children: An exemplar of the Knowledge-to-Action Framework
title_full_unstemmed Asthma Education Program for First Nations Children: An exemplar of the Knowledge-to-Action Framework
title_sort asthma education program for first nations children: an exemplar of the knowledge-to-action framework
publisher Canadian Respiratory Journal
publishDate 2013
url https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/260489
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/260489
op_rights Copyright © 2013 Hindawi Publishing Corporation.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/260489
container_title Canadian Respiratory Journal
container_volume 20
container_issue 4
container_start_page 295
op_container_end_page 300
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