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Improving Childhood Asthma Outcomes in the United States
A Blueprint for Policy Action
A set of policy recommendations to promote the development and maintenance of communities in which children with asthma can be swiftly diagnosed, effectively treated, and protected from exposure to harmful environmental factors. An estimated 5 million U.S. children have asthma. Too many of these children are unnecessarily impaired. Much of the money spent on asthma is for high-cost health care services to treat acute periods of illness. Many asthma attacks could be avoided — and much suffering prevented and many medical costs saved — if more children received good-quality, ongoing asthma care and if the 11 policy recommendations presented in this report were implemented in a oordinated fashion. A national call to action, the policy recommendations span public and private interests and compel integration of public health activities across local, state, and federal levels. This report summarizes the findings of an effort funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation as part of the Pediatric Asthma Initiative, whose purpose is to address current gaps in national childhood asthma care. It is the first national initiative that simultaneously addresses treatment, policy, and financing issues for children with asthma at the patient, provider, and institutional levels. The purpose of RAND’s effort was to: — identify a range of policy actions in both the public and private sectors that could improve childhood asthma outcomes nationwide — select a subset of policies to create a blueprint for national policy in this area — outline alternatives to implement these policies that build on prior efforts. The effort developed a comprehensive policy framework that maps the identified strategies to one overall policy objective: to promote the development and maintenance of asthma-friendly communities — communities in which children with asthma are swiftly diagnosed, receive appropriate and ongoing treatment, and are not exposed to environmental factors that exacerbate their condition. This report is intended as a working guide for coordinating the activities of both public and private organizations at the federal, state, and local community levels.
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Pages: 124
ISBN/EAN: 0-8330-2997-5
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Contents
Preface PDF
National Expert Committee Members and RAND Health Staff PDF
List of External Reviewers PDF
Executive Summary PDF
Acknowledgments PDF
Abbreviations PDF
Chapter One:
Introduction PDF
Chapter Two:
Policy Context PDF
Chapter Three:
Overview of Methods PDF
Chapter Four:
Policy Framework PDF
Chapter Five:
Policy Recommendations PDF
Chapter Six:
Conclusion PDF
Appendix:
Federal Legislation Relevant to Childhood Asthma PDF
References PDF
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