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Controlling Asthma
Requires Constant Vigilance
By Victoria White
Modern medicine can control most cases of
asthma, but so many children don't take their prescriptions as directed
that health-care professionals and parents must constantly be alert for
failure to follow doctor's orders, a University of Florida physician warns.
The stakes are high: Millions suffer attacks of wheezing and
shortness of breath that are more frequent and severe than they need
to be, putting them at risk for permanent lung damage and even death.
Furthermore, patients may wind up on increased doses or more toxic
medications because doctors mistakenly believe the original treatment
plan had been ineffective.
"No one should have to die from asthma," said Dr. James Sherman,
a professor of pediatrics and chief of the pediatric pulmonary division in
UF's College of Medicine. "Yet studies have shown that 30 percent to
70 percent of people with the disease do a poor job of keeping up with
the medication, which results in increased emergency room visits,
hospitalizations and deaths.
"So when physicians have patients whose asthma is out of control,
they need to think first about whether the person is really taking the
medicines properly," said Sherman, whose article on the topic was
published earlier this year in the journal Contemporary Pediatrics.
An estimated 15 million people in the United States-about a third of
them children--have asthma, a chronic condition characterized by
inflamed airways that occasionally flares into severe breathing
difficulties. The incidence of the disease has been rising steadily during
the past two decades. In 1995, more than 1.5 million emergency
department visits, 500,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths were
attributed to asthma, according to the National Institutes of Health.
For all but the most mild cases, daily "controller" medication, which
can be taken in pill or inhaled form, is required to keep inflammation of
the air passages in check. When an attack does occur, a "rescue"
medicine is to be taken. Also, with the aid of a handheld meter,
patients with more severe disease are directed to take a daily or twice-
daily measure of their ability to push air out of their lungs.
"It may not sound like the most difficult regimen," Sherman said.
"But on the other hand, the majority of people in the United States
know they're supposed to exercise four times a week and floss their
teeth every day. How many of us do that? In general, preventative kinds
of measures seem to be difficult for people."
Complicating the picture is the fact that many of those with asthma
are young children unable to be responsible for their own health.
"Many of the patients we see don't have a family structure that can
handle a chronic illness," Sherman said. "The medications also can be
expensive, and some patients cannot afford them."
People with asthma often don't have symptoms every day, Sherman
noted.
"So there's not that 'sick' reminder that you have to take your
medicine. And if you fail to take your controller medicine, the
consequence of that can be delayed for days or even weeks, which
limits the incentive to take it," Sherman said.
Physicians should emphasize to patients and their families the
potentially life-threatening risks of uncontrolled asthma, Sherman said.
They should work with families to find medicines and a daily treatment
schedule that is realistic and acceptable.
"If you prescribe a medication and the patient tells you he is so
frightened of it that he doesn't think he can take it, then letting him walk
out with it is a prescription for nonadherence," he said.
But if education and negotiation don't work, and patients still aren't
doing well, doctors must become steadily more aggressive at
monitoring medication use.
Leslie Hendeles, a UF professor of pharmacy and a clinical
pharmacist in the pediatric pulmonary clinic, suggests physicians call
pharmacists to see how frequently prescriptions are being filled. If the
patient doesn't order refills at regular intervals, it is unlikely that they are
taking the medicine regularly.
Health-care providers also can check on patients by counting the
number of pills left since the last visit, or weigh inhaler canisters to see
how many puffs have been taken. Commercial products are available
that record the date and time pill bottles are opened or the number of
times an inhaler has been activated.
To encourage proper medication use, physicians can arrange for
home visits by a nurse or work to identify an "asthma partner" - a
relative, neighbor or other volunteer who will help a family stay on track
with the treatment plan.
Sherman and Hendeles sometimes develop contracts with their
patients, laying out what is expected, and agreeing to be available to
the family at any time for questions.
"In very rare circumstances, if adherence is still a problem and the
child has life-threatening asthma, we have sometimes gone to court to
have the child placed in a circumstance where medication will be
provided regularly," Sherman said.
"But most of the time, it doesn't come to that," Sherman said. "We
have often been able to take patients who are on high doses of multiple
medications, none of which are taken as prescribed, and helped them
control their asthma with much smaller doses of fewer medications by
improving their adherence."
Recent UF Health Science Center news releases are available at www.health.ufl.edu/hscc/index.html
From: UF.HEALTH.NEWSNET
[UFHEALTHNEWS-L@LISTS.UFL.EDU] on behalf of
UF.Health.Newsnet [BPOWERS@vpha.health.ufl.edu]
Sent: Friday, May 28, 1999 University of
Florida Health Science Center and Shands HealthCare. For more
information, please call 352/344-2738 or 352/392-7579 or email: vickiwhite@xtalwind.net or
rossana@vpha.health.ufl.edu
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