Are
Parents Doing All They Can to Protect Kids from Asthma?
Tobacco
smoke and pet dander are proven triggers of asthma attacks in children.
Yet,
the number of smokers and pets in homes with asthmatic children does
not appear to be any lower than in other households, says a new report.
Physicians
Should Tailor Asthma Treatment Programs to Family Differences
The
study in the July issue of The Journal of Pediatrics
shows significant differences between families with smokers and those
with pets, and suggests that physicians need to tailor their treatments
to address those differences.
Researchers
with the National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver interviewed
152 asthmatic children, aged 7 to 18 years old, and at least one of
their parents.
They
found that at least one smoker lived in 38 percent of the homes, which
equals the estimated 35 percent to 45 percent of American homes with
at least one smoker.
In
addition, about 67 percent of the asthmatic children lived in homes
with a furred or feathered pet, which is higher than the 59 percent
of US homes reported to have pets.
"These
rates were around the same, if not more, than are found in the regular
population. So, that tells us that having a child who is vulnerable
to asthma reactions does not appear to impact the prevalence of rates
of smoking or pet ownership," says study author Dr. Frederick Wamboldt.
"That
suggests that healthcare professionals just aren't having a major impact"
educating children and their parents about the threats to those with
asthma, adds Wamboldt, head of the center's Division of Psychosocial
Medicine.
Families
Most At Risk
In
trying to learn more about the families in the study, the researchers
were surprised to find certain demographic, socioeconomic, and psychosocial
differences between families with smokers and those with pets.
Families
with smokers were generally found to be less financially stable and
non-Caucasian, with low levels of asthma awareness, and high levels
of stress.
Families
without smokers but those who had pets were typically found to be Caucasian,
with older children, greater asthma awareness, and less stress.
Wamboldt
says that while the study's findings are somewhat general, they still
serve as an important starting point for physicians who need to offer
more effective treatment approaches that are better tailored to a family's
circumstances.
"With
smokers, this tells us treatment should focus on repeatedly discussing
the importance of smoking cessation, rather than just offering the advice
once," he says.
Physicians
should also advise parents on ways to reduce a child's exposure to smoke,
such as having the parent smoke outside, he adds.
For
families with pets, physicians need to determine whether the child is
allergic to the animal and, if so, help come up with ways to reduce
the child's exposure to dander.
"One
Shoe Does Not Fit All" When it Comes to Asthma Treatment
Dr.
Linda Ford, an allergist and a spokeswoman for the American
Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, agrees that physicians
need to take note of more than a patient's asthma—they need to
learn about a family's background and lifestyle.
"Too
often, doctors are rushed into cookie-cutter care," she says. "It's
absolutely important, for instance, to know the socioeconomic factors
of your patients. You have to find out if there are barriers—if
they can't go out and get a dust mite cover, for instance, you need
to know that."
"Or
if you're prescribing drugs that the patient can't afford. Doctors will
sometimes blame the patient for not taking the medicines, and they'll
simply label them as non-compliant patients," Ford says. "But the fault
may be the physician's for not simply taking that extra step to find
out about the patient's ability to pay."
Wamboldt
concurs that it is wrong to assume that all so-called "non-compliant
patients" are the same.
"I
believe that many doctors have two basic asthma patients in their minds:
Good ones who take their medicine and avoid all irritants and allergens,
and bad ones who smoke, have pets and don't take their medications,"
he says.
"We
have learned that the picture is decidedly more complex than that,"
Wamboldt says.
Always
consult your child’s physician for more information.
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