Clinical Review

Barriers to Self-Management in African American Adolescents with Asthma


 

References

Methods

The initial search strategy was developed in collaboration with an experienced librarian. Keywords, MeSH terms, and potential databases were identified. Keywords included urban, African American, adolescent, asthma, self-management, and barriers. These terms were expanded based on search results and a review of abstracts that fit the intent of our review. The search was limited to U.S. studies published between 2005 and 2017. Excluded from the search were conference abstracts, doctoral dissertations, master’s theses, meta-analyses, systematic reviews, and studies conducted outside of the United States. Additional articles for the review were identified during the review process from the reference lists of the publications.

Abstracts were reviewed for articles that reported a study population inclusive of African American adolescents with asthma and that were related to self-management. Studies that used qualitative and other descriptive methods and cohort and randomized control trials were reviewed. Due to the limited number of articles found that exclusively focused on African Americans, the authors set a threshold for African American participants at 40% or greater for inclusion in this review.

Full papers were retrieved that met the inclusion criteria for a full review. Each author initially independently reviewed a selected number of papers and abstracted the study purpose, sample, study design, results, conclusions, and limitations. Subsequently, both authors reviewed in tandem and then discussed each selected manuscript to assure the appropriateness for inclusion. The subject matter was considered the priority for inclusion in the review. Study methods, sample size, and noted limitations were categorized but were not considered as a basis for exclusion. Thematic analysis was used to identify common themes across studies.

Pages

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