TY - JOUR T1 - Role of a Respiratory Therapist in Improving Adherence to Positive Airway Pressure Treatment in a Pediatric Sleep Apnea Clinic JF - Respiratory Care SP - 2038 LP - 2044 DO - 10.4187/respcare.02312 VL - 58 IS - 12 AU - Supriya K Jambhekar AU - Gulnur Com AU - Xinyu Tang AU - Kristi K Pruss AU - Rithea Jackson AU - Charles Bower AU - John L Carroll AU - Wendy Ward Y1 - 2013/12/01 UR - http://rc.rcjournal.com/content/58/12/2038.abstract N2 - BACKGROUND: Many pediatric patients need positive airway pressure (PAP) for treatment of obstructive sleep-disordered breathing. Adherence to PAP (defined as percent of nights with PAP use of > 4 h) is often poor and not sustained long-term. With any chronic disease, education has been shown to help with patient outcomes. Education of patients and parents regarding PAP can be provided by different healthcare professionals. There is no published literature assessing the role of respiratory therapists (RTs) in improving adherence to PAP in children. We hypothesized that the addition of RT visits to a PAP clinic would improve PAP adherence. METHODS: RT services for PAP patients were introduced in a multidisciplinary pediatric sleep clinic in May 2006. We identified children who had been followed in clinic, and had adherence download information before and after introduction of RT services. We collected demographic, polysomnography, and CPAP adherence data at clinic visits. RESULTS: Forty-six subjects met criteria for inclusion. The mean ± SD age was 14.9 ± 6 y. The mean ± SD apnea-hypopnea index was 26.7 ± 30 events/h. Other than the addition of the RT intervention, all subjects continued to receive the same clinical services as before. Subjects were divided into 3 groups, based on baseline adherence: 0% use, use for 1–50% of nights, and use for > 50% of nights. There was a statistically significant improvement in PAP adherence in the subjects with baseline use of 0% and 1–50%, but no improvement in those with > 50% use at baseline. There was no significant change in PAP use at subsequent RT visits. CONCLUSIONS: Utilization at clinic visits of an RT trained in the use of PAP improved adherence in pediatric subjects with obstructive sleep-disordered breathing when their baseline PAP adherence was < 50%. ER -