Circumstances surrounding the deaths of children due to asthma. A case-control study
B. D. Miller and R. C. Strunk
Department of Pediatrics, National Jewish Center for Immunology and Respiratory Medicine, Denver.
Features of the courses in 12 children who died of an acute attack of
asthma were compared with those in 12 children of comparable age and sex
who had a life-threatening attack of asthma but survived. Information
obtained by structured interviews with the families and physicians and from
the medical records was used to characterize (1) the patient, family,
severity, and treatment of asthma primarily in the 6 months before the
attack and (2) medical circumstances and patient characteristics present on
the day of and/or during the acute episode. Patients in the study (mean
age, 14.1 years) and controls (mean age, 13.8 years) were in early to late
adolescence, had similar long-term medication use histories and an overall
rating of the severity of asthma. For the analysis of the information
concerning the 6 months before the attacks, the study patients had a
greater frequency of respiratory failure requiring intubation, a decrease
in steroid use in the month before the attack, history of family
disturbance, abnormal reaction to separation or loss, and expressed
hopelessness and despair. For the period more immediately surrounding the
acute attack, study patients more often had attacks starting during sleep,
but less frequently experienced vomiting during the course of the attacks.
Treatment of the attack by the parents was poor (primarily because of
delays) in 7 of the 12 children who died, but was also a factor in 6 of the
12 controls. Our data suggest that certain characteristics of asthmatic
children may place them at greater risk for death due to their asthma. In
addition, we postulate that there may be inherent differences in the
mechanisms of the acute attacks between the children who died and those who
survived.
Comorbidity Between Asthma Attacks and Internalizing Disorders AmongPuerto Rican Children at One-Year Follow-Up
Feldman et al.
Psychosomatics 2006;47:333-339.
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Psychosocial Factors and Asthma
Kamal et al.
Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 2004;169:1253-1254.
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Acute Asthma Among Adults Presenting to the Emergency Department: The Role of Race/Ethnicity and Socioeconomic Status
Boudreaux et al.
Chest 2003;124:803-812.
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Fatal asthma or anaphylaxis?
Rainbow and Browne
Emerg. Med. J. 2002;19:415-417.
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Case-control study of severe life threatening asthma (SLTA) in adults: psychological factors
Kolbe et al.
Thorax 2002;57:317-322.
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A Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial of Regular Monotherapy With Short-Acting and Long-Acting {beta}2-Agonists in Allergic Asthmatic Patients
Cloosterman et al.
Chest 2001;119:1306-1315.
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Emotion and Pulmonary Function in Asthma: Reactivity in the Field and Relationship With Laboratory Induction of Emotion
Ritz and Steptoe
Psychosom. Med. 2000;62:808-815.
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The Influence of Parent-Child Relatedness on Depressive Symptoms in Children With Asthma: Tests of Moderator and Mediator Models
Bleil et al.
J Pediatr Psychol 2000;25:481-491.
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The Relationship Between Psychosocial Factors and Asthma Morbidity in Inner-City Children With Asthma
Weil et al.
Pediatrics 1999;104:1274-1280.
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Depression in Pediatric Chronic Illness: A Diathesis-Stress Model
Burke and Elliott
Psychosomatics 1999;40:5-17.
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