Barriers and Enablers of Delivering Asthma Self‐Management to Those With Intellectual Disabilities: A Scoping Review
Louise Allan, Nicola Roberts, Nicola Ring, Lisa O'Leary

TL;DR
This review finds that asthma self-management is poorly studied in people with intellectual disabilities, with education and caregiver support being key to improving outcomes.
Contribution
The paper is the first scoping review to systematically identify barriers and enablers of asthma self-management in individuals with intellectual disabilities.
Findings
Only six studies from 2015 to 2022 met inclusion criteria, showing a lack of research in this area.
Education of patients and caregivers is critical for asthma self-management in this population.
Caregivers and support workers play a vital role in helping individuals with intellectual disabilities manage their asthma.
Abstract
Respiratory‐related illness including asthma is a leading cause of avoidable higher mortality in those with intellectual disabilities. International guidelines stress the importance of good self‐management in avoiding asthma‐related deaths but give no guidance on how this is achieved with this vulnerable population. A scoping review of published research to identify barriers and facilitators to promoting asthma self‐management in people with intellectual disabilities. Only six studies published from 2015 to 2022 met study inclusion criteria. Studies commonly reported that the education of patients and caregivers was critical, with a lack of education being a barrier to good asthma control. Three studies also highlighted the importance of caregivers and support workers in helping those with intellectual disabilities to self‐manage their asthma. This review highlights the paucity of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDown syndrome and intellectual disability research · Asthma and respiratory diseases · Stuttering Research and Treatment
