Asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases in childhood.
Severe asthma attacks and breathing problems are associated with an
increased risk of health problems like obesity as well as academic
challenges like chronic absences from school and cognitive
impairments that can lead to lower grades and test scores; city kids
with asthma are particularly vulnerable to flare-ups because they
often live with worse indoor and outdoor air quality and have fewer
safe places to play and exercise outdoors, previous research has
found.
For the current study, researchers looked at asthma and allergies,
lung function, school attendance, and academic performance for 182
Latino school children, 182 black students, and 81 white kids. All
of the kids were between 7 and 9 years old and students in one of
four large urban public school districts.
"We found associations between poor asthma status, poorer asthma
control, lower lung function, more asthma symptoms, and decline in
academic performance," said lead study author Daphne Koinis-Mitchell
of Bradley/Hasbro Children's Research Center in Providence, Rhode
Island.
"These associations were stronger in ethnic minority children,
particularly Latino children," Koinis-Mitchell said.
Compared to children with well-controlled asthma, students with more
daily asthma symptoms missed more days of school, completed fewer
assignments, and had lower quality work, researchers report in the
Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology.
The biggest indicator of poor school performance, however was asthma
control.
Poorly controlled asthma appeared to have the worst impact on
academic performance for Latino students, although black students
also fared worse than white students with the breathing disorder.
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The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how asthma might directly impact school outcomes. It also wasn't
designed to prove to what extent students' racial or ethnic
background might directly impact the connection between asthma and
things like school attendance or grades.
Kids with asthma may take a variety of daily medications to control
the breathing disorder and also carry rescue inhalers to help
restore their breathing when they have an asthma attack.
Children may struggle to manage the condition when their parents
have difficulty getting them to doctor checkups, paying for care, or
affording medications. Children in poor urban neighborhoods may also
be more likely to attend schools without a nurse on staff or formal
support programs in place to help kids manage asthma and other
chronic health problems.
And when kids have severe asthma, it can impact their health and
school performance even when parents and children don't see obvious
symptoms, said said Dr. Jason Lang, a researcher at Duke University
School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina, who wasn't involved in
the study.
"Good asthma control is not just important to reduce the risk for
full-blown asthma attacks, but also because mild increases in asthma
symptoms affect sleep quality, school attendance and academic
performance," Lang said by email. "It's hard for kids who are
struggling with just minor breathing symptoms to concentrate and do
their best in class."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2UwXl1R Annals of Allergy, Asthma and
Immunology, online March 11, 2019.
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