PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 1 July 2001, p. e11
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
Navajo Perceptions of Asthma and Asthma Medications: Clinical
Implications
Received Sep 18, 2000; accepted Jan 30, 2001.

From the * Respiratory Sciences Center, Arizona Health Sciences
Center, Tucson, Arizona, and the Background. Despite the large number
of asthma patients, relatively little is known about the beliefs of
asthmatic children and their parent(s), or the extent to which these
beliefs influence management of the disease.
Objective. The purpose of this study was to examine how
medication-taking and the use of health care services were influenced
by perceptions of the disease and beliefs about medications among
Navajo families.
Methods. Ethnographic interviews were used to investigate
the disease and medication beliefs of 22 Navajo families with 29 asthmatic children.
Results. Most respondents perceived asthma as the
transient experience of symptoms in someone who was chronically
vulnerable to breathing problems. The majority (97%) of these
asthmatics reported using bronchodilators, although only 34% reported
current use of antiinflammatory medications. Although
controller medications were distinguished from rescue medications, they
were thought to have the same effect on the lungs. Many families were
concerned about becoming dependent on the medicines and attempted to
"wean" the asthmatic from the drugs. A large proportion (80%) of
children had assumed responsibility for their own medication taking.
Parents often referred to previous attacks requiring treatment in the
emergency department when deciding whether to initiate medication or
seek medical attention, often resulting in a delay of treatment.
Nebulized treatments delivered in the emergency department were
perceived to be the strongest therapy available. As a result, visits to
the emergency department were common (79%), as were hospital
admissions (57%).
Conclusion. This study provides evidence that, among
pediatric Navajo asthma patients, perceptions of asthma and beliefs
about the activity of asthma medications influence when and how often
asthma medicines are taken, as well as the use of health care services.
In addition, excessive reliance on emergency treatments and the high
rates of hospital admissions suggest that asthma is undertreated in this group of Navajo patients.
Department of Pediatrics,
University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona.




