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Children's experiences of a participation approach to asthma education
Author(s) -
Trollvik Anne,
Ringsberg Karin C,
Silén Charlotte
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.12069
Subject(s) - perspective (graphical) , psychology , asthma , exploratory research , vocabulary , health care , medical education , medicine , developmental psychology , nursing , pedagogy , sociology , linguistics , philosophy , artificial intelligence , anthropology , economics , economic growth , computer science
Aim and objectives To explore the participation and responses of children to an asthma education programme that was developed with the aid of children with asthma. In a larger perspective, the aim was to understand how educational approaches can be designed to help children learn to live and cope with asthma. Background A literature search showed that programmes where children participate in the development of educational materials or programmes are lacking. Design An exploratory descriptive design was chosen to get an in‐depth understanding of the communication and collaboration between children and healthcare personnel. Methods Data were collected through observations, tape recordings of the conversations and notes of the interactions between the children and the healthcare personnel and analysed by content analysis. Results The significance of the asthma education programme emerged in four themes: (i) children are learning from each other : in a positive learning climate, the children were able to express emotional themes that they may not have communicated before; (ii) children are learning through an interaction with the educational material : the children discussed stories and pictures in a fellow interplay: when one child expressed something, another child would recognise it and continue the story; (iii) children are learning from their interaction with healthcare personnel and vice versa : adjusting the vocabulary according to the children's experiences, they were met on their level of understanding; and (iv) children can express and discuss their understanding of asthma . Conclusions The unique aspect about this programme is that it emanates from children's perspectives. The children were actively involved and learnt from each other's shared knowledge and experiences, which is a good source of meaningful learning and empowering processes. Relevance to clinical practice Future educational approaches should use children's perspectives in a manner in which their questions, thoughts and daily challenges are emphasised.

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