2025 Annual Report

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

BRINGING ASTHMA CARE CLOSER TO HOME IN ALABAMA’S BLACK BELT CHILDREN’S DEVELOPS A NEW INITIATIVE TO HELP ASTHMA PATIENTS IN UNDERSERVED REGION

Dallas, Marengo, Perry and Wilcox counties, part of the Black Belt (so named for its rich, dark soil), are four of the poorest counties in Alabama. They also have some of the highest rates of childhood asthma—nearly 12% compared to the state’s 8%—and are severely underserved when it comes to medical care. Two of the counties don’t even have a pediatrician.

4 % Just 4% of the patients seen at Children’s Specialty Asthma Clinic are from the Black Belt.

Yet just 4% of the more than 5,000 patients seen at Children’s of Alabama’s Specialty Asthma Clinic hail from those areas. “We realized these kids weren’t getting to us for help,” pediatric pulmonologist Isabel L. Virella-Lowell, M.D., said. “But Medicaid data showed a high number of asthma-related claims from the area. So we knew there was a gap.”

One reason is distance, with families having to drive up to three hours to reach Birmingham. Thus, many children receive care only during asthma flare-ups at urgent care clinics or emergency rooms rather than ongoing, preventive treatment, said Children’s and University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Pediatric Asthma Program Director Teresa G. Magruder, M.D. Without a primary care physician overseeing their child’s asthma, families find themselves caught in a cycle of crisis-driven care. So instead of hoping kids will come to Birmingham, Virella-Lowell and Magruder are bringing their expertise to the Black Belt. Their mission: improve those dismal asthma statistics by engaging the community at a grass-roots level. The initiative began when Children’s and UAB infectious disease specialist Claudette Poole, M.D., spent time in the area studying water sanitation and parasites. She kept hearing about an asthma crisis and recruited Virella-Lowell and Magruder.

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CHILDREN’S OF ALABAMA | UAB MEDICINE

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