The FAMSS is a valuable tool to assess family-based asthma management that addresses gaps in available assessment methodologies and holds promise for research and clinical applications.
The allocation of responsibilities for asthma management within African-American families was examined in 60 adolescents and their primary caretakers. Separate structured interviews were conducted with adolescents and primary caretakers, and perceptions of family management, adherence to asthma treatment regimen, and functional morbidity were assessed. Support for the primary hypothesis that higher levels of nonadherence and functional morbidity would be observed in families where caretakers overestimated the level of adolescent involvement in asthma self-care was found. Implications for family-based asthma management in ethnic minority adolescents are discussed.
The role of gender in schizophrenia is explored, and literature on gender and schizophrenia is critically reviewed. The importance of investigating gender differences in schizophrenia is underscored by the lack of sufficient research in this area to date and the comparative neglect of sociocultural issues during the "decade of the brain." The importance of incorporating gender factors into research analysis is demonstrated via an interdisciplinary discussion that involves psychiatric, anthropological, and sociological theory. Methodological and measurement issues in gender-based research are considered. Selected directions for future research initiatives that expand beyond a dichotomous comparison of "male" and "female" sex differences to examine the role of gender along a continuum as a sociocultural influence on schizophrenia onset, illness presentation, and treatment are presented.
Our study found support for the role of family response to symptoms in mediating the relationship between child symptom perception and morbidity, particularly with regard to underestimation of symptoms, underscoring the need for behavioral tools to accurately recognize and optimally respond to exacerbations.
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