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Primary Care Respiratory Journal
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Promoting the use of Personal Asthma Action Plans: a systematic review
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  • Review Article
  • Published: 12 October 2007

Promoting the use of Personal Asthma Action Plans: a systematic review

  • Nicola Ring1,
  • Cari Malcolm2,
  • Sally Wyke1,
  • Steve MacGillivray2,
  • Diane Dixon3,
  • Gaylor Hoskins4,
  • Hilary Pinnock5 &
  • …
  • Aziz Sheikh5 

Primary Care Respiratory Journal volume 16, pages 271–283 (2007)Cite this article

  • 4689 Accesses

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Abstract

Objectives:

To investigate how best to encourage health professionals to promote, and for people with asthma to use, asthma action plans.

Methods:

Systematic review. Randomised controlled trials published between 1960 and 2006 were searched using multiple electronic databases. Unpublished and ongoing studies were identified by contacting asthma experts internationally. Included trials reported outcome data for the promotion of action plans including issue of plans by health professionals, and patient ownership and use.

Results:

14 trials satisfied our study inclusion criteria. Of these, only four studies reported data for action plan use. Interventions included: education of doctors and people with asthma; telephone reinforcement; partially completed action plans and postal prompts inviting patients for general practice review; school asthma clinics; and asthma management systems (including the 3+ plan with patient recall for review and Internet-based physician monitoring). These interventions increased action plan ownership, use, or facilitation of use. Two of the highest quality papers were conducted in primary care and demonstrate the effectiveness of interventions directed at the organisation of asthma care in promoting action plan use.

Conclusions:

Primary care professionals could encourage the ownership and use of action plans through the implementation of proactive practice-based organisational systems, though further research is required to assess their practicality and effect on sustaining use long-term. Multi-disciplinary teams working in areas where asthma action plan ownership and use is sub-optimal should therefore consider how such interventions could be incorporated into existing practices and healthcare systems.

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Author information

Authors and Affiliations

  1. Department of Nursing & Midwifery, Alliance for Self-Care Research, University of Stirling, Stirling, Scotland, FK9 4LA, UK

    Nicola Ring & Sally Wyke

  2. Alliance for Self-Care Research, Tayside Institute for Health Studies, University of Abertay, Dundee, Scotland, UK

    Cari Malcolm & Steve MacGillivray

  3. Department of Psychology, University of Stirling, Stirling, Scotland, UK

    Diane Dixon

  4. Tayside Centre for General Practice, Community Health Sciences, University of Dundee, Scotland, UK

    Gaylor Hoskins

  5. Division of Community Health Sciences:GP Section, Allergy & Respiratory Research Group, University of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK

    Hilary Pinnock & Aziz Sheikh

Authors
  1. Nicola Ring
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  2. Cari Malcolm
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  3. Sally Wyke
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  4. Steve MacGillivray
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  5. Diane Dixon
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  6. Gaylor Hoskins
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  7. Hilary Pinnock
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  8. Aziz Sheikh
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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Nicola Ring.

Ethics declarations

Competing interests

AS co-chairs the Science and Research Committee of the British Thoracic Society. HP chairs the Self-management and Patient Education Evidence Review Group for the British Thoracic Society/Scottish Inter-collegiate Guideline Network asthma guideline.

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Cite this article

Ring, N., Malcolm, C., Wyke, S. et al. Promoting the use of Personal Asthma Action Plans: a systematic review. Prim Care Respir J 16, 271–283 (2007). https://doi.org/10.3132/pcrj.2007.00049

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  • Received: 27 February 2007

  • Accepted: 15 May 2007

  • Published: 12 October 2007

  • Issue date: October 2007

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3132/pcrj.2007.00049

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