@article {Ricerespcare.06600, author = {Jared B Rice and Kathleen M Mathieson}, title = {A Comparison of Practice Patterns Among Certified and Noncertified Asthma Educators}, elocation-id = {respcare.06600}, year = {2019}, doi = {10.4187/respcare.06600}, publisher = {Respiratory Care}, abstract = {BACKGROUND: Asthma educators are essential for providing patients with the knowledge and skills needed to control asthma. The purpose of this descriptive, cross-sectional survey was to examine the differences in practice patterns between certified and noncertified asthma educators.METHODS: Subjects (N = 98) included certified asthma educators (n = 66) and noncertified asthma educators (n = 32) who provided asthma education directly to patients and their families. Subjects were asked to complete an asthma task assessment tool, composed of a 31-item Likert scale survey based on the AE-C certification exam content and the National Asthma Education Prevention Program{\textquoteright}s Expert Panel Report 3 guidelines, which include 6 domains of asthma education (ie, the asthma condition, assessing the patient and family, behavioral and environmental factors, asthma management education, asthma medications, and organizational issues). Subjects identified frequency in performing specific asthma education tasks on a scale from {\textquotedblleft}Always{\textquotedblright} to {\textquotedblleft}Never.{\textquotedblright}RESULTS: Noncertified asthma educators were significantly more likely than certified asthma educators to report performing tasks more frequently than certified asthma educators for item 17: Explain the definition of asthma control and loss of control, and controlled versus not well controlled. The largest difference in reported means between certified and noncertified asthma educators was for item 8: Diagnose asthma, with certified asthma educators reporting higher frequencies. Certified asthma educators reported higher frequency scores on 11 of the 31 tasks.CONCLUSION: For a majority of the education tasks, certified versus noncertified responses did not differ in their reported frequency of performing education tasks. Future researcher should examine the potential differences in patient outcomes based on provider certification status.}, issn = {0020-1324}, URL = {https://rc.rcjournal.com/content/early/2019/10/01/respcare.06600}, eprint = {https://rc.rcjournal.com/content/early/2019/10/01/respcare.06600.full.pdf}, journal = {Respiratory Care} }