Vargas Perla A, Brenner Barry, Clark Sunday, Boudreaux Edwin D, Camargo Carlos A
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR 72202-3591, USA.
Pediatr Pulmonol. 2007 Jul;42(7):646-55. doi: 10.1002/ppul.20637.
Environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure has been associated with increased use of the emergency department (ED) for acute asthma care. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of ETS exposure among children presenting to the ED for acute asthma care and whether ETS exposure affects acute asthma severity or response to therapy. We conducted a multi-center study of children 2-11 years with physician-diagnosed acute asthma presenting to 44 EDs in 18 states. Chi-square test, Student's t-test, Wilcoxon rank sum test, and logistic regression were used for the analyses. The study population included 954 children. Thirty-six percent (95% CI, 33-39%) of caregivers reported that their child was exposed to ETS. Among exposed children, 35% were exposed 1-6 days/week, and 65% were exposed daily. Compared to unexposed children, ETS-exposed children were older at asthma diagnosis, older at ED presentation, and were less likely to be Hispanic. Indicators of chronic asthma severity were higher among unexposed children (i.e., total number of medications, use of controller medications, use of beta(2) agonists, number of urgent clinic visits, and lifetime hospitalizations). There was a weak association between ETS and acute asthma severity. Response to therapy (including ED disposition) did not differ between groups. On multivariate analysis, ETS-exposed children were more likely to be older, female, non-Hispanic, have lower household income, not use controller medications, and have a pet at home (all P < 0.05). Our study showed that the prevalence of ETS exposure among children presenting to the ED with acute asthma differs across demographic factors. There were no significant differences in acute asthma symptoms or response to ED therapy between ETS-exposed and unexposed children. Lower use of controller medications and less frequent urgent clinic visits among ETS-exposed children suggest inadequate asthma care or milder disease. The weak association between ETS exposure and acute asthma severity might reflect confounding by psychological factors and/or chronic asthma severity. The frequency of ETS exposure suggests that the ED may be an appropriate venue to engage caregivers of children with asthma in asthma education and smoking cessation efforts.
接触环境烟草烟雾(ETS)与因急性哮喘护理而增加的急诊科(ED)就诊率相关。本研究的目的是确定因急性哮喘护理前往急诊科就诊的儿童中ETS暴露的患病率,以及ETS暴露是否会影响急性哮喘的严重程度或对治疗的反应。我们对18个州44家急诊科中2至11岁经医生诊断为急性哮喘的儿童进行了一项多中心研究。分析采用卡方检验、学生t检验、威尔科克森秩和检验以及逻辑回归。研究人群包括954名儿童。36%(95%可信区间,33 - 39%)的照顾者报告其孩子接触过ETS。在接触过ETS的儿童中,35%每周接触1 - 6天,65%每天接触。与未接触过ETS的儿童相比,接触过ETS的儿童哮喘诊断时年龄更大,到急诊科就诊时年龄更大,且不太可能是西班牙裔。未接触过ETS的儿童慢性哮喘严重程度指标更高(即药物总数、使用控制药物、使用β₂激动剂、紧急门诊就诊次数和终生住院次数)。ETS与急性哮喘严重程度之间存在微弱关联。两组之间对治疗的反应(包括急诊科处置)没有差异。多因素分析显示,接触过ETS 的儿童更可能年龄较大、为女性、非西班牙裔血统、家庭收入较低、不使用控制药物且家中有宠物(所有P < 0.05)。我们的研究表明,因急性哮喘前往急诊科就诊的儿童中ETS暴露的患病率因人口统计学因素而异。接触过ETS与未接触过ETS的儿童在急性哮喘症状或对急诊科治疗的反应方面没有显著差异。接触过ETS的儿童控制药物使用较少且紧急门诊就诊频率较低,这表明哮喘护理不足或病情较轻。ETS暴露与急性哮喘严重程度之间的微弱关联可能反映了心理因素和/或慢性哮喘严重程度的混杂作用。ETS暴露的频率表明,急诊科可能是一个让哮喘儿童的照顾者参与哮喘教育和戒烟努力的合适场所。