Authors
Carol L Armour, Kate LeMay, Bandana Saini, Helen K Reddel, Sinthia Z Bosnic-Anticevich, Lorraine D Smith, Deborah Burton, Yun Ju Christine Song, Marie Chehani Alles, Kay Stewart, Lynne Emmerton, Ines Krass
Publication date
2011/11/1
Journal
Journal of Asthma
Volume
48
Issue
9
Pages
914-922
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Background. Although asthma can be well controlled by appropriate medication delivered in an appropriate way at an appropriate time, there is evidence that management is often suboptimal. This results in poor asthma control, poor quality of life, and significant morbidity. Methods. The objective of this study was to describe a population recruited in community pharmacy identified by trained community pharmacists as being at risk for poor asthma outcomes and to identify factors associated with poor asthma control. It used a cross-sectional design in 96 pharmacies in metropolitan and regional New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, and Australian Capital Territory in Australia. Community pharmacists with specialized asthma training enrolled 570 patients aged ≥18 years with doctor-diagnosed asthma who were considered at risk of poor asthma outcomes and then conducted a comprehensive asthma assessment …
Total citations
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