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Featured researches published by James W. Stout.


American Journal of Public Health | 2004

Community Violence and Asthma Morbidity: The Inner-City Asthma Study

Rosalind J. Wright; Herman Mitchell; Cynthia M. Visness; Sheldon Cohen; James W. Stout; Richard W. Evans; Diane R. Gold

Objectives. We examined the association between exposure to violence and asthma among urban children. Methods. We obtained reports from caretakers (n = 851) of violence, negative life events, unwanted memories (rumination), caretaker-perceived stress, and caretaker behaviors (keeping children indoors, smoking, and medication adherence). Outcomes included caretaker-reported wheezing, sleep disruption, interference with play because of asthma, and effects on the caretaker (nights caretaker lost sleep because of child’s asthma). Results. Increased exposure to violence predicted higher number of symptom days (P = .0008) and more nights that caretakers lost sleep (P = .02) in a graded fashion after control for socioeconomic status, housing deterioration, and negative life events. Control for stress and behaviors partially attenuated this gradient, although these variables had little effect on the association between the highest level of exposure to morbidity, which suggests there are other mechanisms. Conclusi...


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2008

Acute respiratory health effects of air pollution on children with asthma in US inner cities

George T. O'Connor; Lucas M. Neas; Benjamin Vaughn; Meyer Kattan; Herman Mitchell; Ellen F. Crain; Richard Evans; Rebecca S. Gruchalla; Wayne J. Morgan; James W. Stout; G. Kenneth Adams; Morton Lippmann

BACKGROUND Children with asthma in inner-city communities may be particularly vulnerable to adverse effects of air pollution because of their airways disease and exposure to relatively high levels of motor vehicle emissions. OBJECTIVE To investigate the association between fluctuations in outdoor air pollution and asthma morbidity among inner-city children with asthma. METHODS We analyzed data from 861 children with persistent asthma in 7 US urban communities who performed 2-week periods of twice-daily pulmonary function testing every 6 months for 2 years. Asthma symptom data were collected every 2 months. Daily pollution measurements were obtained from the Aerometric Information Retrieval System. The relationship of lung function and symptoms to fluctuations in pollutant concentrations was examined by using mixed models. RESULTS Almost all pollutant concentrations measured were below the National Ambient Air Quality Standards. In single-pollutant models, higher 5-day average concentrations of NO2, sulfur dioxide, and particles smaller than 2.5 microm were associated with significantly lower pulmonary function. Higher pollutant levels were independently associated with reduced lung function in a 3-pollutant model. Higher concentrations of NO2 and particles smaller than 2.5 microm were associated with asthma-related missed school days, and higher NO2 concentrations were associated with asthma symptoms. CONCLUSION Among inner-city children with asthma, short-term increases in air pollutant concentrations below the National Ambient Air Quality Standards were associated with adverse respiratory health effects. The associations with NO2 suggest that motor vehicle emissions may be causing excess morbidity in this population.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2000

Asthma and the home environment of low-income urban children: Preliminary findings from the seattle-king county healthy homes project

James Krieger; Lin Song; Timothy K. Takaro; James W. Stout

ObjectivesChildhood asthma is a growing public health concern in low-income urban communities. Indoor exposure to asthma triggers has emerged as an important cause of asthma exacerbations. We describe indoor environmental conditions related to asthma triggers among a low-income urban population in Seattle/King County, Washington, as well as caregiver knowledge and resources related to control of these triggers.MethodsData are obtained from in-person, structured, closed-end interviews with the caretakers of children aged 4–12 years with persistent asthma living in households with incomes less than 200% of poverty. Additional information is collected during a home inspection. The children and their caregivers are participants in the ongoing Seattle-King County Healthy Homes Project, a randomized controlled trial of an intervention to empower low-income families to reduce exposure to indoor asthma triggers. We report findings on the conditions of the homes prior to this intervention among the first 112 enrolled households.ResultsA smoker was present in 37.5% of homes. Mold was visible in 26.8% of homes, water damage was present in 18.6% of homes, and damp conditions occurred in 64.8% of households, while 39.6% of caregivers were aware that excessive moisture can increase exposures to allergens. Dust-trapping reservoirs were common; 76.8% of childrens bedrooms had carpeting. Cockroach infestation in the past 3 months was reported by 23.4% of caregivers, while 57.1% were unaware of the association of roaches and asthma. Only 19.8% of the children had allergy-control mattress covers.ConclusionsMany low-income urban children with asthma in King County live in indoor environments that place them at substantial risk of ongoing exposure to asthma triggers. Substandard housing and lack of resources often underlie these exposures. Initiatives involving health educators, outreach workers, medical providers, health care insurers, housing agencies, and elected officials are needed to reduce these exposures.


Pediatrics | 2006

A randomized clinical trial of clinician feedback to improve quality of care for inner-city children with asthma

Meyer Kattan; Ellen F. Crain; Suzanne Steinbach; Cynthia M. Visness; Michelle Walter; James W. Stout; Richard Evans; Ernestine Smartt; Rebecca S. Gruchalla; Wayne J. Morgan; George T. O'Connor; Herman Mitchell

CONTEXT. Barriers impede translating recommendations for asthma treatment into practice, particularly in inner cities where asthma morbidity is highest. METHODS. The purpose of this study was to test the effectiveness of timely patient feedback in the form of a letter providing recent patient-specific symptoms, medication, and health service use combined with guideline-based recommendations for changes in therapy on improving the quality of asthma care by inner-city primary care providers and on resultant asthma morbidity. This was a randomized, controlled clinical trial in 5- to 11-year-old children (n = 937) with moderate to severe asthma receiving health care in hospital- and community-based clinics and private practices in 7 inner-city urban areas. The caretaker of each child received a bimonthly telephone call to collect clinical information about the childs asthma. For a full year, the providers of intervention group children received bimonthly computer-generated letters based on these calls summarizing the childs asthma symptoms, health service use, and medication use with a corresponding recommendation to step up or step down medications. We measured the number and proportion of scheduled visits resulting in stepping up of medications, asthma symptoms (2-week recall), and health care use (2-month recall). RESULTS. In this population, only a modest proportion of children whose symptoms warranted a medication increase actually had a scheduled visit to reevaluate their asthma treatment. However, in the 2-month interval after receipt of a step-up letter, 17.1% of the letters were followed by scheduled visits in the intervention group compared with scheduled visits 12.3% of the time by the control children with comparable clinical symptoms. Asthma medications were stepped up when indicated after 46.0% of these visits in the intervention group compared with 35.6% in the control group, and when asthma symptoms warranted a step up in therapy, medication changes occurred earlier among the intervention children. Among children whose medications were stepped up at any time during the 12-month study period, those in the intervention group experienced 22.1% fewer symptom days and 37.9% fewer school days missed. The intention-to-treat analysis showed no difference over the intervention year in the number of symptom days, yet there was a trend toward fewer days of limited activity and a significant decrease in emergency department visits by the intervention group compared with controls. This 24% drop in emergency department visits resulted in an intervention that was cost saving in its first year. CONCLUSIONS. Patient-specific feedback to inner-city providers increased scheduled asthma visits, increased asthma visits in which medications were stepped up when clinically indicated, and reduced emergency department visits.


Journal of Asthma | 1998

The Asthma Outreach Project: A Promising Approach to Comprehensive Asthma Management

James W. Stout; Lisa C. White; La Tonya Rogers; Teresa McRorie; Barbara Morray; Marijo Miller-Ratcliffe; Gregory J. Redding

We describe a pilot system of coordinated asthma care emphasizing home visits by a community-based lay worker collaborating with a pediatrician, pharmacist, and public health nurse. Study participants included 23 low-income children with moderate to severe asthma and their families at an inner-city pediatric clinic. This system was successfully implemented, and client satisfaction was extremely high. Utilization review showed a reduction in hospitalizations, emergency department visits, and unscheduled clinic visits, and an increase in follow-up clinic visits. This model of care may reduce unscheduled service use and deserves further study as an alternative for asthma management among similar patient populations.


JAMA Pediatrics | 2010

Toothache in US Children

Charlotte W. Lewis; James W. Stout

OBJECTIVES To describe the prevalence of and risk factors for recent toothache among US children and to estimate frequency of contact between children with toothache and their pediatric primary care providers (PPCP). DESIGN Cross-sectional analysis of nationally representative data. SETTING The 2007 National Survey of Childrens Health. PARTICIPANTS Population-based sample of parents/guardians of 86 730 children aged 1 through 17 years from 50 states and the District of Columbia. OUTCOME MEASURE Parent-reported toothache in the last 6 months. RESULTS A total of 10.7% of US children and 14% of children aged 6 to 12 years experienced toothache in the last 6 months. Poor and low-income minority children and those with special needs were significantly more likely to have had a toothache on multivariable analysis. Most children with toothache in the last 6 months had their own physician (88.9%) and had a preventive medical visit in the last year (88.1%), pointing to opportunities for PPCP to identify and intervene with children who have untreated dental decay and toothache. CONCLUSIONS Toothache is not the universal experience it was before the advent of modern dentistry. Nevertheless, a substantial number of US children recently had a toothache, with noteworthy variability between states. There are opportunities for PPCP to address oral health prevention, assess for dental decay and toothache, and treat complications. We propose toothache as a potential quality indicator reflecting disparities in oral health for a population.


Academic Pediatrics | 2012

Learning from a Distance: Effectiveness of Online Spirometry Training in Improving Asthma Care

James W. Stout; Karen Smith; Chuan Zhou; Cam Solomon; Allen J. Dozor; Michelle M. Garrison; Rita Mangione-Smith

OBJECTIVE We evaluated the effectiveness of a virtually delivered quality improvement (QI) program designed to improve primary care management for children with asthma. METHODS Thirty-six physicians, nurses, and medical assistants from 14 primary care pediatric practices (7 matched practice pairs) participated in a cluster randomized trial from October 2007 to September 2008. All practices received a spirometer and standard vendor training. A 7-month QI program delivered during the study period included: 1) Spirometry Fundamentals™ CD-ROM, a multimedia tutorial; 2) case-based, interactive webinars led by clinical experts; and 3) an internet-based spirometry quality feedback reporting system. Practice pairs were compared directly to each other, and between-group differences were analyzed with the use of mixed effects regression models. Our main outcome measures were the frequency of spirometry testing, percentage of acceptable quality spirometry tests, asthma severity documentation, and appropriate controller medication prescribing. RESULTS Participating practices uploaded a total of 1028 spirometry testing sessions, of which 340 (33.1%) were of acceptable quality. During the 7-month intervention period, there was no difference between intervention and control practices in the frequency of spirometry tests performed. Intervention practices were estimated to have significantly greater odds of conducting tests with acceptable quality compared with matched control practices, adjusting for quality in the baseline period (odds ratio 2.85; 95% confidence interval 1.78-4.56, P < .001). Intervention providers also had significantly greater odds of documenting asthma severity during the intervention period (odds ratio 2.9, 95% confidence interval 1.8-4.5; P < .001). Although use of controller medications among patients with persistent asthma approached 100% for both groups, the proportion of asthma patients labeled as persistent increased from 43% to 62% among intervention practices, and decreased from 57% to 50% among controls (NS). CONCLUSIONS A multifaceted distance QI program resulted in increased spirometry quality and improved assessment of asthma severity levels. Successful participation in QI programs can occur over distance.


Annals of Family Medicine | 2011

Effect of e-learning and repeated performance feedback on spirometry test quality in family practice: a cluster trial

Tjard Schermer; R.P. Akkermans; Alan Crockett; Marian van Montfort; Joke Grootens-Stekelenburg; James W. Stout; Willem Pieters

PURPOSE Spirometry has become an indispensable tool in primary care to exclude, diagnose, and monitor chronic respiratory conditions, but the quality of spirometry tests in family practices is a reason for concern. Aim of this study was to investigate whether a combination of e-learning and bimonthly performance feedback would improve spirometry test quality in family practices in the course of 1 year. METHODS Our study was a cluster trial with 19 family practices allocated to intervention or control conditions through minimization. Intervention consisted of e-learning and bimonthly feedback reports to practice nurses. Control practices received only the joint baseline workshop. Spirometry quality was assessed by independent lung function technicians. Two outcomes were defined, with the difference between rates of tests with 2 acceptable and repeatable blows being the primary outcome and the difference between rates of tests with 2 acceptable blows being the secondary outcome. We used multilevel logistic regression analysis to calculate odds ratios (ORs) for an adequate test in intervention group practices. RESULTS We analyzed 1,135 tests. Rate of adequate tests was 33% in intervention and 30% in control group practices (OR = 1.3; P=.605). Adequacy of tests did not differ between groups but tended to increase with time: OR = 2.2 (P = .057) after 3 and OR = 2.0 (P = .086) in intervention group practices after 4 feedback reports. When ignoring test repeatability, these differences between the groups were slightly more pronounced: OR = 2.4 (P = .033) after 3 and OR=2.2 (P = .051) after 4 feedback reports. CONCLUSIONS In the course of 1 year, we observed a small and late effect of e-learning and repeated feedback on the quality of spirometry as performed by family practice nurses. This intervention does not seem to compensate the lack of rigorous training and experience in performing spirometry tests in most practices.


Journal of Asthma | 2002

Explanatory models of asthma from African-American caregivers of children with asthma

Jane W. Peterson; Yvonne M. Sterling; James W. Stout

Explanatory models (EMs) were collected from 20 African-American adult primary caregivers, in Seattle and New Orleans, who have children with asthma, to understand asthma from their perspective. Family EMs of asthma shed light on the meaning family members give to the illness, and how they make internally logical decisions related to their healthcare behavior. Study findings show that families have their own EMs of asthma. Families draw on their cultural context to understand asthma. They compare their lived experience with healthcare-provider explanations of asthma. Specifically, the African-American families in this study drew much of their information about asthma from other family members and from personal experience. Collecting EMs of asthma may help healthcare providers know the meaning of asthma as understood by specific families and may reduce unscheduled use of health services. Further research should include encounters which increase the healthcare providers context for understanding patient and family EMs.


Public Health Reports | 2001

Differences in asthma prevalence between samples of American Indian and Alaska native children

James W. Stout; Lisa C. White; Gregory J. Redding; Barbara Morray; Patricia Martinez; Peter J. Gergen

OBJECTIVES To better understand the prevalence of asthma among American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) children and to explore the contribution of locale to asthma symptoms and diagnostic assignment, the authors surveyed AI/AN middle school students, comparing responses from metropolitan Tacoma, Washington (metro WA) and a non-metropolitan area of Alaska (non-metro AK). METHODS Students in grades 6-9 completed an asthma screening survey. The authors compared self-reported rates of asthma symptoms, asthma diagnoses, and health care utilization for 147 children ages 11-16 self-reporting as AI/AN in metro WA and 365 in non-metro AK. RESULTS The prevalences of self-reported asthma symptoms were similar for the metro WA and non-metro AK populations, but a significantly higher percentage of metro WA than of non-metro AK respondents reported having received a physician diagnosis of asthma (OR 2.33; 95% CI 1.23, 4.39). The percentages of respondents who reported having visited a medical provider for asthma-like symptoms in the previous year did not differ. CONCLUSIONS The difference in rates of asthma diagnosis despite similar rates of asthma symptoms and respiratory-related medical visits may reflect differences in respiratory disease patterns, diagnostic labeling practices, or environmental factors. Future attempts to describe asthma prevalence should consider the potential contribution of non-biologic factors such as diagnostic practices.

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Meyer Kattan

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Ellen F. Crain

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Rebecca S. Gruchalla

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Richard Evans

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Karen Smith

University of Washington

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Rita Mangione-Smith

Seattle Children's Research Institute

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