Price David, David-Wang Aileen, Cho Sang-Heon, Ho James Chung-Man, Jeong Jae-Won, Liam Chong-Kin, Lin Jiangtao, Muttalif Abdul Razak, Perng Diahn-Warng, Tan Tze-Lee, Yunus Faisal, Neira Glenn
Centre of Academic Primary Care, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK ; Research in Real Life, Singapore.
University of the Philippines-Philippine General Hospital, Manila, Philippines.
J Asthma Allergy. 2015 Sep 23;8:93-103. doi: 10.2147/JAA.S82633. eCollection 2015.
Asthma is a global health problem, and asthma prevalence in Asia is increasing. The REcognise Asthma and LInk to Symptoms and Experience Asia study assessed patients' perception of asthma control and attitudes toward treatment in an accessible, real-life adult Asian population.
An online survey of 2,467 patients with asthma from eight Asian countries/regions, aged 18-50 years, showed greater than or equal to two prescriptions in previous 2 years and access to social media. Patients were asked about their asthma symptoms, exacerbations and treatment type, views and perceptions of asthma control, attitudes toward asthma management, and sources of asthma information.
Patients had a mean age of 34.2 (±7.4) years and were diagnosed with asthma for 12.5 (±9.7) years. Half had the Global Initiative for Asthma-defined uncontrolled asthma. During the previous year, 38% of patients visited the emergency department, 33% were hospitalized, and 73% had greater than or equal to one course of oral corticosteroids. About 90% of patients felt that their asthma was under control, 82% considered their condition as not serious, and 59% were concerned about their condition. In all, 66% of patients viewed asthma control as managing attacks and 24% saw it as an absence of or minimal symptoms. About 14% of patients who correctly identified their controller inhalers had controlled asthma compared to 6% who could not.
Patients consistently overestimated their level of asthma control contrary to what their symptoms suggest. They perceived control as management of exacerbations, reflective of a crisis-oriented mind-set. Interventions can leverage on patients' trust in health care providers and desire for self-management via a new language to generate a paradigm shift toward symptom control and preventive care.
哮喘是一个全球性的健康问题,且在亚洲哮喘的患病率正在上升。“认识哮喘并将其与症状及经历相联系”亚洲研究评估了在易于接触的成年亚洲实际人群中患者对哮喘控制的认知以及对治疗的态度。
对来自八个亚洲国家/地区的2467名年龄在18至50岁之间、在过去两年中开具过至少两份处方且能使用社交媒体的哮喘患者进行了一项在线调查。询问患者有关其哮喘症状、加重情况和治疗类型、对哮喘控制的看法和认知、对哮喘管理的态度以及哮喘信息来源。
患者的平均年龄为34.2(±7.4)岁,被诊断为哮喘12.5(±9.7)年。一半患者患有全球哮喘防治创议定义的未控制哮喘。在前一年,38%的患者前往急诊科就诊,33%的患者住院治疗,73%的患者接受了至少一个疗程的口服糖皮质激素治疗。约90%的患者认为其哮喘得到了控制,82%的患者认为其病情不严重,59%的患者对自己的病情感到担忧。总体而言,66%的患者将哮喘控制视为应对发作,24%的患者将其视为无症状或症状轻微。正确识别其控制型吸入器的患者中约14%患有已控制的哮喘,而无法识别的患者中这一比例为6%。
与症状所显示的情况相反,患者一直高估其哮喘控制水平。他们将控制视为对病情加重的管理,反映出一种以危机为导向的思维模式。干预措施可以利用患者对医疗服务提供者的信任以及通过一种新的方式进行自我管理的愿望,以实现向症状控制和预防保健的范式转变。