African American parents'/guardians' health literacy and self-efficacy and their child's level of asthma control Article (Faculty180)

cited authors

  • Wood, Marilynne R; Price, James H; Dake, Joseph A; Telljohann, Susan K; Khuder, Sadik A

description

  • Nearly 1 of 10 American children has asthma. Asthma is addressed in Healthy People 2010 as a public health problem. This study examined the relationship between parents'/guardians' health literacy levels and their perceived self-efficacy to manage their child's asthma. A four-page asthma questionnaire was developed to assess the self-efficacy of parents/guardians of African American children with asthma. There was a statistically significant relationship among the parents'/guardians health literacy levels and their perceived efficacy expectations to manage their child's asthma. There is evidence that high parental/guardian self-efficacy and successful asthma management contribute to a child with well-controlled asthma. It is necessary for patient educators to capitalize on physician/nurse visits and use the time for asthma education, particularly to increase the efficacy expectations of parents/guardians with limited health literacy skills.

authors

publication date

  • 2010

published in

start page

  • 418

end page

  • 27

volume

  • 25