Premium
Knowledge of asthma in school teachers in nine Spanish cities
Author(s) -
Varela Angel LópezSilvarrey,
Esteban Santiago Rueda,
Díaz Sonia Pértega,
Murúa Javier Korta,
FernándezOliva Carmen Rosa Rodríguez,
Jiménez Jose Sánchez,
Sansano María Isabel Ubeda,
Bernabé Juan José Morell,
López Bárbara Iglesias,
Gómez Máximo Martínez,
Piñana Juana María Román
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
pediatric pulmonology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.866
H-Index - 106
eISSN - 1099-0496
pISSN - 8755-6863
DOI - 10.1002/ppul.23363
Subject(s) - medicine , asthma , family medicine , immunology
Summary Objective To analyze the knowledge of asthma and its management in Spanish school teachers using the Newcastle Asthma Questionnaire (NAKQ). Design Descriptive, observational prevalence study, using a self‐report questionnaire on knowledge about childhood asthma and its management by teachers in pre‐school, primary, and secondary schools in nine Spanish cities. Age, sex, academic training, teaching experience, courses in which they taught, and personal and family history of asthma, were collected from each teacher. For knowledge determination, the validated Spanish version of the NAKQ was used. Results A total of 208 centers participated, including 7,494 teachers. The questionnaire was completed by 4,679 teachers (62.4%). The mean score of correct responses was 16.0 ± 4.8 points out of 31 (median = 17, range: 0–30). Only 6.8% of teachers were capable of pointing out the three main symptoms of the disease; 1.5% knew the triggering factors of an asthma attack; 8.6% knew two medicines useful during an asthma attack; 32.7% knew that inhaled medications had less side effects than pills, and only 3.8% knew of ways to prevent asthma attacks during exercise. In the multivariate analysis, variables significantly associated with a higher questionnaire score were a “lower age” (Beta coefficient = −0.09), “male gender” (Beta = 0.77), “being asthmatic” (Beta = 2.10), or “having close relatives with asthma” (Beta = 1.36) and “teaching in a private school” (Beta = 0.66) or in “compulsory secondary education” (Beta = 0.59). Conclusions Teachers have a low level of knowledge about asthma, with an important limitation in some aspects of the disease. They should be trained to recognize the main symptoms of the disease, on how to act in the event of symptoms, and the early identification of situations in which the pupils require health care assistance. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2016;51:678–687 . © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.