Asthma
Symptoms Not Always Recognized and Treated
When it comes to asthma, experts say there is a
huge knowledge gap between what patients believe they must endure as
part of their illness and what they spare themselves by managing their
disease properly.
"We have known for a long time that asthma can be
controlled better, that it is not being controlled as well as it can
be, and that we ought to do something about it," says Dr. Norman Edelman,
a professor of medicine at the State University of New York at Stony
Brook and a medical consultant to the American
Lung Association.
About 20 million Americans have asthma and at least
half are not as controlled as they could be - suffering needlessly
from interrupted sleep, lost days at work or school, and inability
to exercise, says Dr. Edelman.
A recent poll taken by the Asthma
and Allergy Foundation of America (AAFA) found that 88 percent
of nearly 600 adults who have asthma reported managing their symptoms
well.
But that may not be the case: In that same group,
61 percent said they had to catch their breath while running up the
stairs, 48 percent have been awakened during the night as a result
of asthma symptoms, and 50 percent have had to stop exercising in the
middle of their regimens.
Among 118 respondents whose children have asthma,
89 percent felt their children's symptoms were being well-controlled,
yet half of the children had missed days of school and or work, half
were unable to complete their exercise programs, and 45 percent were
awakened in the night because of asthma symptoms.
"This was an interesting study of perception versus
reality," says AAFA spokesperson Mike
Tringale. "These people have learned to live with compromised lives."
He
adds, "Now,
however, because of better understanding of the disease, better preventive
education and better medicines, most
people with asthma don't have to have any symptoms."
The implications of poorly managed asthma are numerous,
including physical problems such as weight gain from not exercising.
"Weight gain is terrible for asthma, because it
exacerbates the symptoms," he notes.
And there are more subtle psychological changes.
"People's personalities are affected," Dr. Edelman
says. "Even though you are going about your daily activities, like
going to work, you are still disabled because you are not functioning
at your maximum. It changes who you are."
To close the knowledge gap, both the American
Lung Association and AAFA have
started programs to alert asthma sufferers that most can control
their asthma more effectively.
Last spring the American
Lung Association introduced a five-question online test on
its Web site for asthma sufferers over the age of 12.
Questions include asking if and how seriously within
the last four weeks asthma symptoms prevented asthmatics from completing
work at school or in the office, if those with asthma are kept awake
at night because of their illness, and how often asthmatics have experienced
shortness of breath.
"About 100,000 people have taken the test online,
and two-thirds of them have found that they don't have their asthma
under control," notes Dr. Edelman.
The test's success has spurred the Lung
Association to develop another quiz designed for children
under 12, to be answered by their parents.
The AAFA's program
called Sleep Work Play also helps asthma
patients better recognize their symptoms so they can talk to their
doctors about controlling them.
"People haven't been talking in the same language," says AAFA's
Tringale. "Doctors don't probe deeply enough in patients' symptoms,
parents don't question their kids."
The program includes a Web site questionnaire that
asks asthma patients about their sleep, work, and play habits. It also
encourages users to take the completed questionnaire to their physician,
so that the two of them can discuss how to better manage asthma symptoms.
The
questions - for example, "Do you have to stop
and do things differently because of your asthma? Please be specific:
even little things like walking through a park, petting a dog, going
on vacation, etc." - help people to think about how asthma symptoms
are really affecting their lives, Tringale says.
Always consult your physician for more information.
|