Prevalence of Asthma in Australian Children
Prevalence of Asthma in Australian Children
Prevalence of Asthma in Australian Children
Introduction
Asthma is a chronic inflammatory condition of the airways, affecting an estimated 300 million people worldwide (GINA 2004). The common features of asthma are recurrent episodes of wheezing, breathlessness and chest tightness, associated with widespread narrowing of the airways (NAEPP 1997). However, these features are difficult to identify in young children. Parents report that their infant or child has wheezing, noisy breathing and, sometimes, fast breathing (Mellis 2009). A range of entities, such as viral bronchiolitis, bronchitis, or upper respiratory tract infections, may all manifest in similar ways or with overlapping clinical features. Children with wheezing may be labelled with the diagnosis asthma, wheezing illness or one of these other illnesses mentioned above. Sometimes the diagnosis of asthma is made in retrospect, when it is clear that the disease is more than transient episodes of wheezing. Asthma is not a precisely defined entity in preschool-age children. In this report we have tended to use the term asthma and wheezing illness interchangeably when referring to younger children. In citing data from other reports, we have adhered to the terms used in those reports.
prenatal and postnatal events, and early childhood exposures may all contribute to the development of asthma and related disorders in children (see Table 1.1).
Table 1.1: Characteristics, behaviours and environmental exposures that have been linked, positively or negatively, to the presence of asthma
Inherent factors Sex Genetics Family heredity Socioeconomic status Remoteness Aboriginality Ethnicity and migration Dik et al. 2004; Strachan 1985 Bottema et al. 2008; Vercelli 2003 London et al. 2001; Metsala et al. 2008 Cesaroni et al. 2003 Clement et al. 2008 Bremner et al. 1998; Valery et al. 2001; Valery et al. 2003; Veale et al. 1996 Leung et al. 1994; Netuveli et al. 2005; Wilson et al. 2006
Li et al. 2005; Stein et al. 1999 Metsala et al. 2008; Sears 1997 Jaakkola et al. 2001; Miller 2001 McKeever et al. 2001; Toos et al. 2008 Chandra 1997; Dyson et al. 2005; Oddy 2000; Oddy et al. 1999 Jackson et al. 2008 Lucas & Platts-Mills 2005 Doull 2001; Martinez & Holt 1999; Strachan 2000 Von Mutius 2007 Hesselmar et al. 1999 Burgess et al. 2008 Tariq et al. 2000 Sutherland 2008 Dik et al. 2004
Bronchiolitis Reduced physical activity Siblings Child care attendance Pet ownership
Other conditions
Note: Inclusion here does not imply a causal relationship has been demonstrated.
Not all children with asthma or wheezing in early childhood have persisting disease. In many children the wheezing is relatively transient. Children with more troublesome asthma in early childhood are more likely to have persistent disease (Jenkins M A et al. 1994; Oswald 1994; Reed 2006; Sears 1994). Other reported risk factors for persistent asthma include early onset of the disease, having a family history of asthma, being allergic, having airway hyperresponsiveness (twitchiness of the airways), increased frequency of respiratory infections and lack of contact with older children (Lewis et al. 1995; Martinez 2002a; Reed 2006; Sears et al. 2003; To et al. 2007). The use of health-care services for asthma may be influenced by access, education, socioeconomic status, country of birth and length of time in Australia (Christakis et al. 2001; Jones et al. 2008). Other risk factors associated with health
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care use, particularly hospitalisation, include the severity of asthma, poor asthma management and improper use of asthma medications (Christakis et al. 2001; Rasmussen et al. 2002).
Study aims
This study investigates the incidence, prevalence, risk factors, management and consequences of parent-reported wheeze or asthma among infants and kindergarten-age children in Australia. It aims to answer the following questions: 1. What risk factors are associated with the development of wheeze and asthma among infants in the first three years of life? 2. What risk factors are associated with the development of asthma among children between the fifth and seventh years of life? 3. What risk factors are associated with the persistence of wheeze between the fifth and seventh years of life? 4. What health services and medications are used in relation to childhood asthma? 5. What are the consequences or outcomes of childhood asthma or wheeze? Definitions of the terms parent-reported wheeze and asthma are provided in Chapter 2.
In Chapter 3, risk factors associated with the development of wheeze or asthma in infants are examined. In Chapter 4, risk factors associated with the development of asthma in kindergarten-age children are examined. Chapter 5 presents data on the persistence of wheeze in the kindergarten cohort. Health service utilisation and medication use in relation to childhood asthma is explored in Chapter 6. The last study question, investigating outcomes associated with childhood asthma, is addressed in Chapter 7. The concluding chapter of this report summarises the main findings across all chapters and considers the limitations as well as the future possibilities for studies using these data.