HealthyWomen.org
Call Us: 1-877-986-9472 (toll-free)
      Spell Checker
Publications & Resources Sign up for Free e-Newsletters
Health Topics A-Z
 
Table of Contents
 
 
Publications & ResourcesText size: A A A August 30, 2008

Women's Health in the News

Many Treat Asthma Only When Symptoms Appear
Monday, March 13, 2006

HealthDay News

But that's a potentially dangerous practice, researchers warn

MONDAY, March 13 (HealthDay News) -- More than half of American adults with serious asthma believe they only have asthma when they experience symptoms, and many forego using medications when they feel symptom-free, new research shows.

The findings are troubling to asthma experts, however, who note that easing up on asthma medication when symptoms disappear undermines good disease management.

Reporting in the March issue of Chest, researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City surveyed 198 adults hospitalized with asthma. The patients lived in East Harlem, one of the communities hardest hit by asthma in the United States.

"More than half of them thought they only had asthma when they were having symptoms. They are treating asthma more like a cold or flu that will go away between attacks, than as the serious, chronic disease which it is," study lead author Dr. Ethan Halm, associate professor of medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, said in a prepared statement.

Patients who had this "no symptoms, no asthma" belief were one-third less likely to take their asthma medication daily.

"This is particularly troubling because daily use of anti-inflammatory medications is proven to improve asthma control, reduce rates of hospitalizations, and is the cornerstone of guideline recommended best practice," Halm said.

Male patients, those over 65 years old, and patients with no consistent place of care were most likely to have the "no symptoms, no asthma" belief.

The study also found that 20 percent of the patients felt they would not always have asthma and 15 percent expected their doctor to cure them of the disease.

"Our findings suggest that there may be a fundamental disconnect between how patients and physicians think about and manage asthma," Halm said. "As clinicians, we need to find better ways to uncover patients' underlying health beliefs as a critical first step to trying to help them understand and treat their asthma as a serious but controllable chronic disease."

SOURCE: Mount Sinai School of Medicine, news release, March 13, 2006

Copyright © 2006 ScoutNews LLC. All rights reserved.

 
  Email this Page Email this Page
Sign up for Free E-Newsletters Print this Page Print this Page
ORDER PUBLICATIONS |  FREE E-NEWSLETTERS |  RSS FEEDS |  SITE MAP |  CONTACT US
National Women's Health Resource Center   157 Broad Street, Suite 106   Red Bank, NJ 07701   1-877-986-9472 (toll-free)