Health Nuts Media and the Big Bad Wolf Teach Kids about Asthma During Asthma … – WebWire (press release)

Health Nuts Media and the Big Bad Wolf Teach Kids about Asthma During Asthma
WebWire (press release)
Los Angeles, CA – May 18, 2012; In recognition of Asthma Awareness Month, Health Nuts Media (healthnutsmedia.com) has launched an animated asthma education series titled Huff & Puff: An Asthma Tale. The seven-episode cartoon is already helping national

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Not your average gown: Hospitalized Kean graduate cheers achievement during … – The Star-Ledger – NJ.com


The Star-Ledger – NJ.com

Not your average gown: Hospitalized Kean graduate cheers achievement during
The Star-Ledger – NJ.com
Juana Gilliam was supposed to graduate Thursday from Kean University, but she's too sick with asthma to make it and is staying at Robert Wood Johnson Hospital in Rahway. RAHWAY — On Tuesday morning, Juana Gilliam sat in her hospital bed in her

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Health Officials Encourage Awareness and Action During World Asthma Month – Muncie Free Press

Health Officials Encourage Awareness and Action During World Asthma Month
Muncie Free Press
INDIANAPOLIS, IN – Nearly 25 million Americans suffer from asthma, a disease that affects the lungs by causing episodes of wheezing, breathlessness, chest tightness and coughing. Children are especially susceptible as one out of every 10 school-aged

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Nurses empowered to administer oral steroids for asthma during emergency – News-Medical.net

Nurses empowered to administer oral steroids for asthma during emergency
News-Medical.net
Asthma is the most common chronic illness in children requiring a visit to Emergency. Every year, the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) sees more than 2500 patients with asthma. Two thirds of these asthma patients present with more than

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Asthma and Second Hand Smoke

Press reports reflect that new studies suggests kids who live with a smoker are more likely to wheeze or get asthma, providing more evidence for the link between secondhand smoke and breathing problems.

Researchers found that the biggest effect on wheeze and asthma symptoms was seen in babies and toddlers whose moms smoked while they were pregnant or soon after kids were born.

The findings don’t prove that secondhand smoke caused kids to get asthma, but they add to other research suggesting smoke exposure may trigger respiratory problems in youngsters, researchers said.

“What this really clearly demonstrates is that the research and data documenting the adverse effects of tobacco smoke exposure on children’s asthma is very strong,” said Dr. Harold J. Farber, who studies smoking exposure and asthma at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston.

He said kids’ lungs may be weaker when they’re exposed to smoke in the womb, and asthma drugs may not work as well in those children.

“Eliminating our children’s tobacco exposure has got to be a critical public health priority,” Farber, who wasn’t involved in the report, told Reuters Health.

Researchers from the UK analyzed more than 70 studies published between 1997 and 2011, all of which asked about smoking by parents or other household members and then tracked which kids were diagnosed with wheezing or asthma going forward.

Those studies showed that when moms smoked while they were pregnant, their kids were 28 to 52 percent more likely to wheeze, depending on the age they were assessed. The effect on asthma symptoms was greatest in babies and toddlers, who were 85 percent more likely to have asthma if they were exposed to smoke in the womb.

When moms or non-parent household members smoked, kids had up to a 70 percent higher chance of wheezing through age four, but the link to full-on asthma was less clear. The effect of maternal smoking was weakest in kids age five to 18.

There was limited data on how smoking by dads affected kids’ chances of wheezing or getting asthma, according to findings published Monday in Pediatrics.

Tricia McKeever from the University of Nottingham and her colleagues said their findings suggest that secondhand smoke has more of an influence on wheeze and asthma than researchers had previously estimated.

“Before, (secondhand smoke) was known as triggering an attack or exacerbating asthma,” said Geoffrey Fong, a tobacco researcher from the University of Waterloo in Canada.

“This study shows that secondhand smoke may cause the development of asthma,” and not just trigger attacks in kids who already have it, said Fong, who wasn’t involved in the new study.

Children prove themselves during annual asthma walk and track and field meet – Imperial Valley Press


Imperial Valley Press

Children prove themselves during annual asthma walk and track and field meet
Imperial Valley Press
But Sombra Cheney, who helped out during the fourth annual Asthma Walk and Go for the Gold Track & Field Meet, was all cheers over Jaime's athletic feat. Many other participants showed their good timing during the athletic function that not only

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