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

About this trial
This is an interventional health services research trial for Asthma focused on measuring ethnicity, primary care, education
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Recent hospital attendance (A&E, admitted) with uncontrolled asthma or recent out of hours (GP service) walk in centre attendance with uncontrolled asthma South Asian ancestry (Bangladeshi, Indian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan) registered with a GP in Newham or Tower Hamlets Exclusion Criteria: patients not of South Asian origin aged under 3 years not currently registered with a local GP physician diagnosis of pure COPD patients unable to give informed consent
Sites / Locations
- Barts and TheLondon, Queen Marys's School of Medicine and Dentistry
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
1
2
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. Lay-led 'expert-patient' education in small groups for patients, using an adaptation of Lorig's chronic disease self-management programme. Improved follow-up in primary care through appointment-booking by the specialist nurse.
Usual Care