Maternal Depressive Symptoms and Adherence to Therapy in Inner-City Children With Asthma


* Departments of Medicine
Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland
Department of Medicine, Howard University, Washington, District of Columbia
Context. Little is known about how depressive symptoms in mothers affects illness management in inner-city children with asthma.
Objective. Our goal was to determine how maternal depressive symptoms influence child medication adherence, impact of the childs asthma on the mother, and maternal attitudes and beliefs.
Methods. Baseline and 6-month surveys were administered to 177 mothers of young minority children with asthma in inner-city Baltimore, MD and Washington, DC. Medication adherence, disruptiveness of asthma, and select attitudes toward illness and asthma therapy were measured. Six-month data (N = 158) were used to prospectively evaluate long-term symptom control and emergency department use. Independent variables included asthma morbidity, age, depressive symptoms, and other psychosocial data.
Results. No difference in child asthma morbidity was observed between mothers high and low in depressive symptoms. However, mothers with high depressive symptoms reported significantly more problems with their child using inhalers properly (odds ratio [OR]: 5.0; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.318.9) and forgetting doses (OR: 4.2; 95% CI: 1.412.4). Depressive symptoms were also associated with greater emotional distress and interference with daily activities caused by the childs asthma, along with less confidence in asthma medications, ability to control asthma symptoms, and self-efficacy to cope with acute asthma episodes. In addition, depressed mothers reported less understanding about their childs medications and use (OR: 7.7; 95% CI: 1.735.9). Baseline asthma morbidity, maternal depression scores, and family income were independently associated with asthma symptoms 6 months later, whereas medication adherence was not predictive of subsequent asthma morbidity or emergency department use.
Conclusions. Maternal depressive symptoms were not associated with child asthma morbidity but were associated with a constellation of beliefs and attitudes that may significantly influence adherence to asthma medications and illness management. Identifying and addressing poor psychological adjustment in mothers is important when developing a childs asthma treatment and may facilitate parent-provider communication, medication adherence, and asthma management among inner-city children.
Key Words: asthma maternal depression medication adherence attitudes beliefs
Abbreviations: ED, emergency department ICS, inhaled corticosteroid CES-D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression scale OR, odds ratio df, degrees of freedom
Received for publication Jan 15, 2003; Accepted May 16, 2003.
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