Friday, April 13, 2012

National Minority Health Month: Child Asthma


According to the CDC, 7 million children suffer from asthma nationwide. According to the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, children in New York City were almost twice as likely to be hospitalized for asthma as children in the United States as a whole. Even more alarming, in recent years, the Bronx has been the New York City borough with the highest overall rates of asthma hospitalizations, deaths and prevalence among children as well as adults. Clearly, disparities exist.

Asthma is a chronic lung disease that can cause the airways to become inflamed and narrow. This can result in coughing, wheezing and tightness of the chest which may make it difficult to breathe. Asthma attacks are often triggered by illness, strenuous activity and the environment; smoke, allergies, pets, mold, dust and pollution can be a trigger. Cockroaches can also trigger asthma attacks, as many children are allergic to the material associated with decaying roaches, and live roaches' excrement. Partners Healthcare, a team of doctors, nurses, respiratory therapists and other health care professionals, cites cockroaches as a bigger trigger than pet dander and dust. Though asthma cannot be cured, it can be treated with regular long-acting medications, and fast-acting medications in the event of an attack.

Children with asthma tend to have family members with asthma, implying that the condition is inherited. However, it is difficult to establish a link between inheritance and an entire race because race is a social construct that cannot be clearly defined by genetics. Asthma can be inherited by any child, regardless of their ethnic background, depending on the child's family history. However, asthma affects children from ethnic minority groups at disparate rates. For example, non-Hispanic black children have a higher prevalence of asthma and die at higher rates from asthma than non-Hispanic white children. Hispanic children have a higher prevalence of asthma compared to non-Hispanic white children.

Many ethnic minority children tend to live in areas in which smoke, mold, dust, pollution and roach infestation may be a problem. These triggers can greatly exacerbate asthma. Due to a lack of health insurance or a regular primary care physician, minority children suffering from asthma may be forced to use a hospital's emergency department for care. Also, due to lack of insurance and/or family instability, it may be difficult for children to regularly take required long-acting asthma medication, as prescribed. One study actually examined the degree to which instability within a family can negatively impact a child's health. Investigators found that family instability is related to poor child health, including asthma.

Additionally, cultural boundaries may contribute to disparities if they result in poor communication between the physician and patient or sub-par care. Poorly controlled asthma has also been linked to poorer performance in school (for example, more absenteeism), and may even help explain the academic achievement gap that exists among children from different ethnic groups. The aforementioned factors contribute to health disparities but are really symptoms of much greater social injustices. In order to rectify the problem, we must more closely examine our society.

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