Development and validation of the BMQ-AIR©: a screening tool for assessing patients’ treatment beliefs about switching to anti-inflammatory reliever (AIR) therapy
Holly Foot, Amy Hai Yan Chan, Rob Horne

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new tool to assess patients' beliefs about switching from SABA to AIR therapy for asthma, which could help improve treatment adherence.
Contribution
The BMQ-AIR© is a novel screening tool developed to evaluate patients' beliefs about switching to anti-inflammatory reliever therapy.
Findings
The BMQ-AIR© has two subscales with good internal reliability (Cronbach’s α-values of 0.70 and 0.69).
The tool showed negative correlations with inhaled corticosteroid adherence and positive correlations with SABA beliefs.
BMQ-AIR© demonstrates satisfactory reliability and validity for identifying patient beliefs about AIR therapy.
Abstract
Despite anti-inflammatory reliever (AIR) therapy now being the preferred treatment choice across all severities of asthma, many patients are still “attached” to their short-acting beta2-agonist (SABA) reliever, believing this to be the best way to control their asthma. To encourage individuals to switch to AIR, it is important to first identify the beliefs that patients hold about AIR. The aim of this paper was to describe the initial development and validation of the BMQ-AIR©, a six-item screening tool which assesses and identifies patients’ treatment beliefs about switching to AIR therapy. Statements were identified from the primary literature that assessed patients’ perceptions of AIR therapy and adapted from the Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire (BMQ). Internal reliability was examined using Cronbach’s alpha coefficient. Construct validity was evaluated by comparing scores on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAsthma and respiratory diseases · Medication Adherence and Compliance · Pregnancy and Medication Impact
