(Chest. 1999;116:132S-134S.)
© 1999
American College of Chest Physicians
Chicago's Response to the Public Health Challenge of Urban Asthma*
Whitney W. Addington, MD, FCCP and
Kevin B. Weiss, MD
*
From the Rush Primary Care Institute (Drs. Addington and Weiss), Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, IL.
Correspondence to: Kevin B. Weiss, MD, Center for Health Services Research, Rush Primary Care Institute, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, 1653 W Congress Pkwy, Chicago, IL 60612
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Introduction
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It
is difficult to discern exactly when asthma switched from being a
common medical concern to a major public health epidemic in our urban
environments. As early as the 1970s, articles suggested that asthma
mortality rates were disproportionately high in a few areas of the
United States, including the Bronx, NY1
and New Orleans,
LA.2
However, this phenomenon was easily considered a
localized problem until the publication of a study that examined
variations in asthma mortality rates across the United States. This
study found asthma mortality to be disproportionately high in urban
environments throughout the country.3
Subsequent studies
of asthma mortality and hospitalizations for a number of US cities have
explored this problem in greater detail.4
5
6
7
8
Asthma
prevalence also appears to be increasing.9
Independently,
these two phenomena are cause for concern; together, they create a
modern public health dilemma of paramount importance.
Throughout the course of this decade, much has been learned about the
problem of urban asthma. One of the principal findings is that much, if
not most, of the disproportionate morbidity appears to be explained by
the socioeconomic status of the affected individuals. Specifically,
several epidemiologic studies have found an inverse relationship
between low socioeconomic status and higher asthma morbidity and
mortality.4
5
10
In response to this finding, the National
Institutes of Health launched the National Cooperative Inner-City
Asthma Study.11
The National Cooperative Inner-City Asthma
Study, along with other studies, has brought to light some of the
unique social, environmental, and medical care factors that appear to
be contributing to this urban health problem.12
13
14
15
During this same period, a number of investigators contributed to our
understanding of intervention strategies that are potentially useful in
combating the problems associated with urban asthma. The majority of
these studies describe the strategies of individual health-care
organizations. More recently, community-based interventions involving
the collaboration of two or more health-care groups or organizations
are beginning to emerge in the literature. Since, at present, there are
no primary prevention strategies proven to reduce asthma prevalence,
most studies have focused on reducing asthma morbidity as their primary
goal.
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Strategies of Individual Health-Care Sectors/Organizations
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There have been a number of studies that have addressed the
problem of asthma morbidity among urban populations of lower social
economic status. One common feature of these studies is that they are
based in a single organization, or they examine one particular sector
of care (eg, a study conducted in one hospital, or a study
of asthma care in emergency departments).
A study by Mayo et al16
demonstrated that a program of
facilitated referral of patients to transitional specialty care reduced
the number of asthma hospitalizations and length of stay at Bellevue
Hospital in New York City. Using a very different strategy, Evans et
al17
demonstrated that efforts to reeducate primary care
providers in a public health clinic setting can lead to enhanced
disease recognition and continuity of care of children with asthma.
Other efforts to improve clinical outcomes for these high-risk
inner-city patients have focused on models of asthma
education.18
The National Cooperative Inner-City Asthma
Study demonstrated that additional social services support can
also be an effective mechanism for reducing asthma
morbidity.19
Thus, there are many examples of possible strategies that might be used
to address the public health problem of urban asthma. However, these
studies all represent isolated solutions as opposed to integrative,
community-based solutions.
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Community-Based Strategies
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There are only a few studies that describe community-based
strategies to addressing the problem of urban asthma. Butz et
al20
reported on the use of community health workers in a
pilot project conducted in the Baltimore-Washington area. In this
study, community health workers, visiting the homes of African-American
families of children with asthma, were effective in providing asthma
education, as well as obtaining medical information on asthma symptoms,
health-care utilization, medication use, and environmental exposures.
Fisher et al21
reported on a community asthma coalition
focused on improving asthma morbidity in an inner-city neighborhood in
St. Louis, MO.
Given the magnitude of urban asthma morbidity, and the likely need to
use many different intervention strategies across various health-care
sectors and organizations, the concept of building a community
coalition appears promising. At a recent meeting sponsored by the
National Asthma Education and Prevention Program in Washington, DC, it
was reported that, as of October 1998, they had identified 44 asthma
coalitions throughout the country, a third of which were targeting
local reductions in asthma morbidity.22
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Chicago's Response to the Public Health Challenge of Urban
Asthma
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Perhaps it is not surprising that the Chicago community has
recognized and accepted the challenge of addressing the major public
health problem of urban asthma. During the past few years, members of
the medical-care community, public health agencies (such as the Chicago
Board of Health and the Cook County Department of Public Health),
academic medical centers, voluntary health organizations, and members
of the general public have all put forth efforts to reduce asthma
morbidity in the Chicago community. At first, these efforts were
independent and isolated from each other. Metaphorically, the
organizations and their asthma programs were operating within silos.
However, in 1996, with the assistance of civic leadership and the
support of a local foundation, organizations and individuals were given
the opportunity to break through their silos and begin working together
as a community to address the issues of asthma in Chicago. Thus was the
start of the Chicago Asthma Consortium (CAC).
This journal supplement describes the many efforts to combat the public
health dilemma of asthma in Chicago. Some of these efforts are the
attempts of the CAC to catalyze new and innovative asthma care
improvement strategies, others are formal clinical studies, and still
others are descriptions of asthma programs without the benefit of
formal evaluation.
The supplement is organized into four sections. The first section
focuses on assessing and characterizing the magnitude of the problem of
asthma in Chicago. The Department of Public Health provides the basic
epidemiology of the burden of asthma as seen through its vital records
and state-based hospitalization records. Since 1996, the Chicago Asthma
Surveillance Initiative has been conducting surveys to characterize
asthma care as delivered by the various components of the health-care
system. This section presents the findings of many of the Chicago
Asthma Surveillance Initiative surveys to date.
The second section of this supplement describes the efforts of the CAC.
Naureckas et al23
provide an introduction to the CAC and
its various committees. This is followed by several detailed narratives
describing the efforts of the CAC School Committee, an evaluation
process developed by the Public/Patient Education Committee, and the
Chicago Emergency Department Asthma Collaborative initiated by the
Access to Care Committee.
The third section presents a series of short narratives under the title
"Community Stories." Although the CAC has been an active and
crucial element in catalyzing activities around the issues of asthma in
Chicago, there are many other exciting projects occurring throughout
the Chicago area that are targeting many of the same objectives. These
projects are not formal academic studies, and most would not meet the
criteria of peer review. However, they are a tribute to the hands-on
work of many individuals and groups that have a true commitment to
improving the quality of care for persons with asthma in their
community.
The fourth section presents traditional, peer-reviewed manuscripts of
original research conducted at several of the large health-care
institutions in Chicago. This section is not inclusive of all the
asthma research in the Chicago area; rather, the manuscripts were
selected because they represent the types of research projects that are
vital to understanding and eventually solving this important public
health problem.
Collectively, the sections of this supplement provide a broad overview
of the actions of one community in attempting to reduce morbidity and
improve care for persons with asthma. It is, of course, too soon to
know just how successful these efforts will be in achieving these
goals. However, the reports in this supplement provide substantive
evidence that the Chicago community is hard at work trying to identify
solutions to this serious public health concern.
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Acknowledgements
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In assembling this supplement, we would like to
express our appreciation to several individuals. The concept of this
publication was, in part, due to the insights of Sydney Parker, PhD,
Vice President, Division of Health and Science Policy of the American
College of Chest Physicians. We would also like to thank Ms. Robin
Wagner for her editorial assistance. Finally, we would like to extend a
special note of appreciation to the members of the Board of the Otho
S. A. Sprague Memorial Institute for funding the publication of
this supplement. In particular, we would like to thank Mr. Charles
Haffner, III, and Mr. James Alexander for their support of this
endeavor.
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Footnotes
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Abbreviation:
CAC = Chicago Asthma Consortium
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