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ASTHMA ON THE RISE
SAN FRANCISCO- The incidence of asthma is increasing at an
alarming rate, mostly as a side effect of poverty, according to
leading experts.
According to the most recent studies from the Centers for
Disease Control, five percent of the U.S. population has some
kind of respiratory disease. In the past ten years the number of
asthma cases has increased 40 percent, with the greatest gains
seen among women and the poor.
Very few patients die from asthma. Even so, the asthma
mortality rate increased by 40% in the U.S. between 1982 and
1991. The mortality rate rose an alarming 59 percent among women,
and blacks. Women and blacks are now nearly seven times as likely
to die from asthma as whites, according to the CDC.
Hospitalization for asthma, as well as emergency room visits for
acute attacks are also on the rise.
"There is mounting evidence that asthma prevalence,
morbidity and mortality are increasing in the U.S. and many other
Western countries. The reasons for these trends are not clear but
are probably complex and involve a number of factors," notes A.
Sonia Buist, M.D., Head, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine,
Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon.
The development of clinical asthma depends on the presence
of host factors, environmental factors and additional co-factors.
Host factors include the genes involved with the bodies response
to allergens and gene involved with the pulmonary inflammatory
response. Very little is know about the genetic basis of asthma.
Air pollution is often assumed to play a role in the
increasing incidence of asthma. Yet air quality has actually
improved significantly in many major urban areas in recent years,
notes Dr. Buist. Two recent articles in the New England Journal
of Medicine show no relation between asthma mortality rates and
the concentration of major air pollutants. However, these studies
do indicate a higher mortality rate among those living below the
poverty line.
It is more likely that aeroallergens in the indoor
environment are important factors in the rise of asthma. These
include house dust mites, cockroaches and cats. Outdoor
aeroallergens, particularly pollens, are also known to play an
important role. Other cofactors include tobacco smoke, air
pollutants and gases such as ozone and nitrogen dioxide.
Respiratory viral infection, seen to be increasing as more
children attend daycare centers, may also be a factor, she says.
Many of the known risk factors for asthma are associated
with poor housing conditions. House dust mites are more prevalent
in old furniture, carpets and drapes. Molds are also more
prevalent in poor housing conditions. The poor also tend to live
in more polluted areas and also tend to have inadequate access to
appropriate health care, she notes.
"The challenge is to identify patients at risk and to
intervene appropriately to reduce their risk of hospitalization
and death," stresses Dr. Buist. A program initiated by the
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute emphasizes that asthma
should be treated as a chronic inflammatory disease; that
environmental factors should be taken seriously; and that a
partnership between patients and health care providers that
includes health education is crucial to optimal asthma
management, she said.
Dr. Buist spoke recently at a UCSF-sponsored conference on
asthma management. The asthma statistics appeared in the CDC's
Morbidity and Mortality Report, 1/6/95. The environmental studies
appeared in NEJM '94; 331:1542-6.
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