Asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico

Objectives: This study evaluates social, behavioral, and environmental determinants to differentiate between active and inactive asthma and how predisposing, enabling, and need factors elucidate asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico. Methods: This study analyze...

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Main Author: María Calixta Ortiz-Rivera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-05-01
Series:SAGE Open Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312117745903
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spelling doaj-1ad25ff2efbf45a5ae8e8d6566f2821c2020-11-25T03:00:58ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open Medicine2050-31212018-05-01610.1177/2050312117745903Asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto RicoMaría Calixta Ortiz-RiveraObjectives: This study evaluates social, behavioral, and environmental determinants to differentiate between active and inactive asthma and how predisposing, enabling, and need factors elucidate asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico. Methods: This study analyzed secondary cross-sectional data from a subsample of 625 adult females who participated in the Asthma Call Back Survey in Puerto Rico. Logistic and multinomial regression analyses were conducted to examine associations between explanatory variables and asthma outcomes. Results: In total, 63% of women reported active asthma, from which 37.9% have not well controlled or very poorly controlled asthma. Women with active asthma were significantly more likely to be out of work, have middle income (US$25,000–<US$35,000), and be obese (≥30 kg/m 2 ). Perceived need of health status is a good predictor to know the odds ratio of women to use emergency room. Women with poorly controlled asthma were significantly associated with increased units of physician urgent visits and emergency room visits. Conclusion: The findings confirmed significant determinants for active asthma and adds information on odds ratio for sensitive subgroups that utilize asthma-related health services in higher proportion than their counterparts. These associations suggest a development of asthma management plan targeting women to control the condition and reduce health-care utilization.https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312117745903
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author María Calixta Ortiz-Rivera
spellingShingle María Calixta Ortiz-Rivera
Asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico
SAGE Open Medicine
author_facet María Calixta Ortiz-Rivera
author_sort María Calixta Ortiz-Rivera
title Asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico
title_short Asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico
title_full Asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico
title_fullStr Asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico
title_full_unstemmed Asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico
title_sort asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in puerto rico
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open Medicine
issn 2050-3121
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Objectives: This study evaluates social, behavioral, and environmental determinants to differentiate between active and inactive asthma and how predisposing, enabling, and need factors elucidate asthma-related health services and asthma control among women in Puerto Rico. Methods: This study analyzed secondary cross-sectional data from a subsample of 625 adult females who participated in the Asthma Call Back Survey in Puerto Rico. Logistic and multinomial regression analyses were conducted to examine associations between explanatory variables and asthma outcomes. Results: In total, 63% of women reported active asthma, from which 37.9% have not well controlled or very poorly controlled asthma. Women with active asthma were significantly more likely to be out of work, have middle income (US$25,000–<US$35,000), and be obese (≥30 kg/m 2 ). Perceived need of health status is a good predictor to know the odds ratio of women to use emergency room. Women with poorly controlled asthma were significantly associated with increased units of physician urgent visits and emergency room visits. Conclusion: The findings confirmed significant determinants for active asthma and adds information on odds ratio for sensitive subgroups that utilize asthma-related health services in higher proportion than their counterparts. These associations suggest a development of asthma management plan targeting women to control the condition and reduce health-care utilization.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312117745903
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