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Asthma-related deaths

Authors :
Anna Agnese Stanziola
Maurizia Lanza
Antonio Molino
Carolina Vitale
Leonardo Antonicelli
Maria D'Amato
Alessandro Sanduzzi
Giovanna Calabrese
Gennaro D'Amato
Mauro Mormile
Alessandro Vatrella
D'Amato, Gennaro
Vitale, Carolina
Molino, Antonio
Stanziola, ANNA AGNESE
SANDUZZI ZAMPARELLI, Alessandro
Vatrella, Alessandro
Mormile, Mauro
Lanza, Maurizia
Calabrese, Giovanna
Antonicelli, Leonardo
D'Amato, Maria
Source :
Multidisciplinary Respiratory Medicine
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
PAGEPress Publications, 2016.

Abstract

Despite major advances in the treatment of asthma and the development of several asthma guidelines, people still die of asthma currently. According to WHO estimates, approximately 250,000 people die prematurely each year from asthma. Trends of asthma mortality rates vary very widely across countries, age and ethnic groups. Several risk factors have been associated with asthma mortality, including a history of near-fatal asthma requiring intubation and mechanical ventilation, hospitalization or emergency care visit for asthma in the past year, currently using or having recently stopped using oral corticosteroids (a marker of event severity), not currently using inhaled corticosteroids, a history of psychiatric disease or psychosocial problems, poor adherence with asthma medications and/or poor adherence with (or lack of) a written asthma action plan, food allergy in a patient with asthma. Preventable factors have been identified in the majority of asthma deaths. Inadequate education of patients on recognising risk and the appropriate action needed when asthma control is poor, deficiencies in the accuracy and timing of asthma diagnosis, inadequate classification of severity and treatment, seem to play a part in the majority of asthma deaths. Improvements in management, epitomized by the use of guided self-management systems of care may be the key goals in reducing asthma mortality worldwide.

Details

ISSN :
20496958
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Multidisciplinary Respiratory Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c4d564a1098d3e76f1df91f49d38984