Children with asthma fare better with specialized treatment from allergists – Clinical Advisor


MD Magazine

Children with asthma fare better with specialized treatment from allergists
Clinical Advisor
Children with asthma who are treated by an allergist are less likely to end up in the emergency department with an asthma attack, according to research presented at the American College of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology (ACAAI) Annual Scientific …
Adherence to Omalizumab Does Not Correlate with Better Response for AsthmaMD Magazine
Study questions benefit of breastfeeding in preventing allergies, asthmainside KOREA
Adverse Reaction to Aspirin Often Misdiagnosed as AllergyMedscape
ObserverLeader.com (blog) –LocalKicks
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74% patients know they are suffering from asthma: Study – ETHealthWorld.com


ETHealthWorld.com

74% patients know they are suffering from asthma: Study
ETHealthWorld.com
A national survey conducted on 743 chest physicians reveals that patients do not know the "standard" (clinical) name of the respiratory disease they are suffering from.Like only 74% patients knew that they had asthma. Syed Intishab Ali | TNN | 08
74 patients know they are suffering from asthma58 Study | Jaipur NYOOOZNYOOOZ

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Glaxo’s Injectable Asthma Treatment ‘Nucala’ Gets Approval From FDA – International Business Times


International Business Times

Glaxo's Injectable Asthma Treatment 'Nucala' Gets Approval From FDA
International Business Times
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has given a go ahead to GlaxoSmithKline Plc's drug Nucala for treatment of severe asthma. The regulato6ry body said that the drug can be used in combination with other therapies and medications for asthma …
FDA Approves New Asthma MedicationSMN Weekly (blog)
Mepolizumab gets green signal from FDA to be used for maintenance treatment of NYC Today
GlaxoSmithKline plc (ADR): Why Nucala's FDA Approval Is SignificantBidness ETC

all 4 news articles »

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Owning a dog may protect your kids from an exhausting chronic disease – Tech Insider (blog)


Tech Insider (blog)

Owning a dog may protect your kids from an exhausting chronic disease
Tech Insider (blog)
Children who grow up with dogs may be 15% less likely to develop asthma than kids who don't, according to a new study published Nov. 2 in the journal JAMA Pediatrics. Early exposures to farm animals, the study also found, add some immune-boosting …
Exposure to animals tied to lower asthma rates in childrenThe Globe and Mail
Decreased Asthma Risk In Children Raised With DogsHealth Aim
Children Exposed To Domestic Animals Have Lesser Risk Of Having Asthma, Study SaysFood World News
Examiner.com –Northern Californian –Jamaica Observer
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Beliefs about medication predict the misattribution of a common symptom as a medication side effect – Evidence from an analogue online study.

Related Articles

Beliefs about medication predict the misattribution of a common symptom as a medication side effect – Evidence from an analogue online study.

J Psychosom Res. 2015 Oct 13;

Authors: Heller MK, Chapman SC, Horne R

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Some perceived medication side effects may be ‘normal’ symptoms that patients misattribute to the medication. Using an analogue approach, we tested if medication beliefs predict whether participants misattribute a headache as a side effect and subsequently intend to stop medication.
METHODS: We recruited 690 participants, 223 reporting a past asthma diagnosis. They received information about asthma and Molair, a fictitious asthma treatment modeled on a licensed treatment (montelukast). We varied the description of efficacy and side effects (which did not include headache). Pre-exposure to this information, participants completed the Beliefs about Medicine Questionnaire (BMQ)-General and the Perceived Sensitivity to Medicines Scale (PSM), post-exposure they completed the BMQ-Specific. Participants were asked to imagine they experienced a headache while taking Molair. Finally, they rated whether the headache was a side effect (misattribution) and if they would stop taking Molair (behavioral intention).
RESULTS: Nearly a quarter (170) of participants misattributed the headache to Molair and 69 (10%) subsequently intended to stop Molair. Both outcomes were predicted by general and specific medication beliefs. Odds of misattribution (m) and behavioral intention (i) increased with higher General Harm (ORm=1.90, ORi=2.72), General Overuse (ORm=1.74, ORi=1.56) and Molair Concern beliefs (ORm=1.52, ORi=1.78, all p<.01), but decreased with General Benefit (ORm=0.72, ORi=0.53) and Molair Necessity beliefs (ORm=0.72, ORi=0.70, all p<.05).
CONCLUSION: Symptom misattribution and subsequent intentions to stop Molair were predicted by pre-exposure beliefs about medicines in general and post-exposure beliefs about Molair. Patients with negative medication beliefs may be prone to misattribute symptoms and subsequently stop medication.

PMID: 26519128 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Hayden Middle School student dies from severe asthma attack suffered after … – North Jefferson News

Hayden Middle School student dies from severe asthma attack suffered after
North Jefferson News
A 13-year-old student at Hayden Middle School has died after she suffered a severe asthma attack following a football game on Friday night. Corie Wingo died Sunday at Children's of Alabama in Birmingham after she was taken off life support. Hayden High …

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Children with asthma suffer from worsening air quality – Ahwatukee Foothills News


Ahwatukee Foothills News

Children with asthma suffer from worsening air quality
Ahwatukee Foothills News
“Air pollution is a major contributing factor to asthma attacks due to the reaction of the lungs from inhaling ground-level ozone or particle pollution,” said Kimberly Byrne, the pediatric asthma program manager at Banner Health. “Although high levels

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