The severity of acute bronchiolitis in infants was associated with quality of life nine months later.

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The severity of acute bronchiolitis in infants was associated with quality of life nine months later.

Acta Paediatr. 2016 Mar 11;

Authors: Rolfsjord LB, Skjerven HO, Carlsen KH, Mowinckel P, Bains KE, Bakkeheim E, Lødrup Carlsen KC

Abstract
AIM: Acute bronchiolitis in infancy increases the risk of later asthma and reduced health-related quality of life (QoL). We aimed to see if the severity of acute bronchiolitis in the first year of life was associated with QoL nine months later.
METHODS: The parents of 209 out of 404 of children hospitalised for acute bronchiolitis in eight paediatric departments in South-East Norway at a mean four months of age (range 0-12 months) completed the Infant Toddler Quality of Life Questionnaire sent by mail nine months after the acute illness. Disease severity was measured by length of stay and the need for supportive treatment. Interactions with gender, inclusion age, prematurity, maternal ethnicity and maternal education were examined.
RESULTS: Reduced QoL in four domains was associated with increased length of stay and need for ventilatory support. Physical abilities and general health were associated with both severity markers, whereas bodily pain and discomfort and change in health were associated with length of stay. Ventilatory support was more negatively associated with QoL than atopic eczema and also associated with reduced parental emotions and parental time.
CONCLUSION: The severity of acute bronchiolitis in infants was associated with reduced QoL nine months later. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

PMID: 26970427 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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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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Foundations working to educate families on asthma, improve quality of life – Imperial Valley Press


Imperial Valley Press

Foundations working to educate families on asthma, improve quality of life
Imperial Valley Press
The parents of children that suffer from respiratory problems and asthma will have the opportunity to take part in a program to help their children improve their quality of life. “We are trying to raise awareness about asthma and educate the public on

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Pediatric Asthma Team Earns Statewide Recognition for Quality Innovation – University of Rochester Newsroom

Pediatric Asthma Team Earns Statewide Recognition for Quality Innovation
University of Rochester Newsroom
The Inpatient Multidisciplinary Pediatric Asthma Care Team (IMPACT) at Golisano Children's Hospital has earned statewide recognition for implementing a quality improvement program that cut its young patients' average hospital length of stay by nearly

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Aerobic exercise seems to curb asthma severity and improves quality of life – Medical Xpress


Medical Xpress

Aerobic exercise seems to curb asthma severity and improves quality of life
Medical Xpress
Children with asthma use inhalers to relieve some of their symptoms, which include coughing, wheezing, chest tightness and shortness of breath. Credit: Tradimus, Wikimedia commons. Aerobic exercise seems to curb the severity of asthma symptoms and …

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Data quality from a longitudinal study of adolescent health at schools near industrial livestock facilities.

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Data quality from a longitudinal study of adolescent health at schools near industrial livestock facilities.

Ann Epidemiol. 2015 Mar 18;

Authors: Guidry VT, Gray CL, Lowman A, Hall D, Wing S

Abstract
PURPOSE: Longitudinal designs enable examination of temporal relationships between exposures and health outcomes, but extended participation can cause study fatigue. We present an approach for analyzing data quality and study fatigue in a participatory, longitudinal study of adolescents.
METHODS: Participants (n = 340) in the Rural Air Pollutants and Children’s Health study completed daily diaries for 3 to 5 weeks in 2009 while we monitored outdoor pollutant concentrations. We used regression models to examine established associations between disease, symptoms, anthropometrics, and lung function as indicators of internal consistency and external validity. We modeled temporal trends in data completeness, lung function, environmental odors, and symptoms to assess study fatigue.
RESULTS: Of 5728 records, 94.2% were complete. Asthma and allergy status were associated with asthma-related symptoms at baseline and during follow-up, for example, prevalence ratio = 8.77 (95% confidence interval: 4.33-17.80) for awakening with wheeze among diagnosed asthmatics versus nonasthmatics. Sex, height, and age predicted mean lung function. Plots depicting outcome reporting over time and associated linear trends showed time-dependent declines for most outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: We achieved data completeness, internal consistency, and external validity, yet still observed study fatigue, despite efforts to maintain participant engagement. Future investigators should model time trends in reporting to monitor longitudinal data quality.

PMID: 25935712 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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