Pediatric asthma specialist care utilization among marginalized children with poorly controlled asthma
Department
Allergy and Immunology
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
The Journal of Asthma
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the use of guideline-recommended specialist care (i.e., pulmonology, allergy) among historically marginalized children with uncontrolled asthma and explore factors associated with specialist care use.
METHODS: We analyzed baseline data from the Telemedicine Enhanced Asthma Management - Uniting Providers (TEAM-UP) trial in Rochester, NY (2018-2023). Caregivers reported on their child's demographics, specialist care utilization/perceptions, and recent asthma symptoms. We conducted bivariate and multivariate analyses to compare specialist care use with demographics, asthma outcomes, primary care physician (PCP) referrals, and caregiver beliefs regarding specialist care.
RESULTS: Among the 325 enrolled children ages 4-12 years (participation rate 62%; 60% male, 35% Hispanic, 58% Black, 80% public insurance), 37% had ever been seen by a specialist and 16% saw a specialist in the prior year. Compared to children who did not see a specialist in the prior year, those who received specialist care were younger, and more were Hispanic, lived in smoke-free homes, had married caregivers, and had household incomes of at or > $35,000. While PCP referrals increased the likelihood of children receiving specialist care, only 23% of children were referred to a specialist by their PCP. Among those not seen by a specialist, 38% reported allergic rhinitis, 42% had smoke exposure within the home, and 81% of caregivers felt specialist care would be helpful for their child.
CONCLUSIONS: This study emphasizes inadequate use of asthma specialist care among marginalized communities, and how PCP referrals may improve the receipt of guideline-recommended specialist care for vulnerable youth with poorly controlled asthma.
First Page
198
Last Page
205
DOI
10.1080/02770903.2025.2581016
Volume
63
Issue
2
Publication Date
2-1-2026
Medical Subject Headings
Humans; Asthma; Child; Male; Female; Child, Preschool; Referral and Consultation; Caregivers; Patient Acceptance of Health Care; Telemedicine; Specialization
PubMed ID
41160475
Recommended Citation
Aman, E., White, R. N., Stern, J., Fagnano, M., Mustafa, S. S., Ramsey, A., & Halterman, J. S. (2026). Pediatric asthma specialist care utilization among marginalized children with poorly controlled asthma. The Journal of Asthma, 63 (2), 198-205. https://doi.org/10.1080/02770903.2025.2581016