
Promoting Partnership and Improving Self-Management for Children With Persistent Asthma
Asthma in ChildrenThe goal of this study is to evaluate a pilot of clinic-based intervention of asthma education. After a scheduled outpatient encounter for well-child care or asthma care has concluded, a pediatric nurse will teach participants (children and their caregivers) about asthma, provide clearly written information about how to manage asthma, and discuss how to manage asthma at home with cooperation between caregivers and children. Families will also receive current asthma prescriptions in clinic, and colored labels will be attached to medications in order to match the color scheme of asthma action plans (green labels for controller medications, red labels for rescue medications). Families will be followed for 3 months after the first clinic visit, including a follow-up visit in clinic 1 month later and a follow-up telephone call 3 months after starting. The nurse will reinforce key educational points and review medication use at the follow-up clinic visit. Families will also be invited to complete an additional in-depth interview following the 1 month clinic follow-up. The investigator hypothesizes that knowledge, self-efficacy, and reported adherence with asthma medications will increase for both caregivers and children/adolescents following the intervention and labeling of delivered medications. In addition, the investigator hypothesizes that children/adolescents will have more symptom free days and improved control following the intervention.

Incentives for Adherence in Adolescent Asthma
AsthmaAsthma in ChildrenFinancial incentives have been suggested as a possible means for increasing adherence to asthma medications. This study will evaluate an incentive strategy (daily small reward for adherence) in maintaining high levels of adherence as tracked by adherence sensors in adolescents with asthma.

A Study to Assess the Pulmonary Safety of Staccato Alprazolam in Healthy Study Participants and...
Healthy Study ParticipantsParticipants With Mild AsthmaThe purpose of the study is to assess the pulmonary safety of Staccato alprazolam in healthy study participants and in and study participants with mild asthma

Validation of Strasbourg Environmental Exposure Chamber ALYATEC in Cat Allergic Subjects With Asthma...
Allergic AsthmaAllergy1 moreThis is a randomized, double blind, cross-over study designed to determine the concentration of airborne cat allergen inducing bronchial response in asthmatic subjects allergic to cat, during allergen exposures in the Alyatec environmental exposure chamber (EEC). The study was also designed to validate the specificity of the asthmatic reaction induced by exposure to airborne cat allergen in Alyatec EEC.

An Electronic Shared Decision-Making Application to Improve Asthma Outcomes
AsthmaThis study will increase knowledge about the feasibility and effect on patient satisfaction and clinical outcomes of using an electronic Shared Decision Making (SDM) application (app) for patients with asthma in the allergy/immunology clinic visit setting. SDM is defined as an approach where clinicians and patients share the best available evidence when faced with the task of making decisions, and where patients are supported to consider options and make informed choices.

Asthma and Indoor-air: Reducing Exposures
AsthmaTwo hundred moderate to severely asthmatic children (6-12 years) will be enrolled in a study to look at the effectiveness of high efficiency filtration of indoor air in homes on reducing asthma symptoms. One intervention group will have high efficiency filters or filtration systems installed in their central heating and air conditioning (HVAC) system. The second intervention group will have high efficiency portable air cleaners placed in the child's bedroom and in the main living area. Each participant will receive true air filtration for a year and a placebo for a year. During the placebo period a sham filter will be used that removes very little of the particles. Measures of health effects will include days of symptoms, unplanned utilization of the healthcare system for asthma-related illness, short-term medication use, peak exhaled flow, spirometry, and exhaled nitric oxide (eNO).

Addressing Barriers to Physical Activity in Inner-City Schoolchildren With Asthma
AsthmaChildren1 moreThis proposal will address the existent gaps in the literature by identifying barriers and facilitators to participation in physical activity in inner-city minority elementary schoolchildren with asthma, more that half of whom are also overweight; developing and refining a school-based intervention in partnership with the community to improve physical activity; and conducting a pilot randomized controlled trial of the intervention to determine feasibility and obtain preliminary data for a future large-scale trial.

Effects of a Pedometer-based Unsupervised Exercise Program Upon Lifestyle Physical Activity of Asthmatic...
AsthmaThe purpose of this study is to determine whether a pedometer-based unsupervised exercise program is more effective than a general exercise recommendation to increase lifestyle physical activity in adult patients with asthma.

Effect of a 12-month Pharmaceutical Care Program on Control of Severe Asthma
AsthmaQuality of LifeOnly a few well-designed studies have investigated the effect of pharmaceutical care on asthma patients and to date there are no published studies investigating this effect specifically on severe and refractory asthma. The objective of this study is evaluate the effect of pharmaceutical care on asthma control and quality of life (QoL) of patients with severe or refractory asthma compared with pharmacist dispensation only.

T Cell Effector and Regulatory Mechanisms in Asthma
AsthmaAllergiesThe specific hypothesis for this study is that there are fundamental differences in T effector and T regulatory cell responses in the lung to allergens in allergic asthma (AA) when compared to allergic nonasthmatics (ANA) that account for the difference in clinical responses. We will address this by comparing T cell responses in AA versus ANA subjects. These experiments will correlate T cell responses with measures of airway physiology using state-of-the art lung imaging and examine mechanisms controlling T cell activation in the airways of AA and the function of airway T regulatory cells during AA.