Asthma Patients May Be Accepting A High Burden Of Disease

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(NAPSA)—If you suffer from asthma, you may be accepting a life filled with interruptions and restrictions to daily activities due to bothersome symptoms. According to a new comprehensive survey of asthma in the United States—AsthmaInsight and Management (AIM)—adults with asthma surveyed experienceactivity limitations, missed work and school days and sometimes even fear the disease.* Asthma is a chronic lung disease affecting more than 22 million adults and children in the United States, according to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI).? People with asthma can experience bothersome symptoms. In the past year, 11 percent of asthmapatients surveyed had sudden severe episodes of coughing, wheezing,chesttightness or shortness of breath daily or on most days.* “On days when my asthma symptomsare at their worst, I find it difficult to be productive and feel very limited in certain activities,” said Ana Fernandez, asthma patient. “There have been several days each month when asthma interrupts my daily routine and makes it more difficult to get my regular activities done each day.” High Physical and Emotional Burden If episodes become frequent or severe, people with asthma may need acute care, including hospitalizations, emergency room visits and other unscheduled emergencyvisits. In the past year, it is estimated that more than one million asthma patients were hospitalized and nearly three million visited emergency rooms in the United States as a result of asthma, according to the AIM surveyresults." Patients with asthmaalso suffer from the emotional burdens of Adults with Asthma Have Had Poorer General Health In the Past Year, Compared to Adults Without Asthma Adults with asthma surveyed reported taking more than three times as many sick days and having more than twice as many daysin which they limited their activities compared to adults without asthma in the past year’ Asthmapatients surveyed reported a 33 percent average decrease in productivity at times of the year when asthmais at its worst, comparedto a typical day’ Twenty-eight percent of adults with asthma say they feel a lot or somelimitation in socialactivities compared to 14 percentof adults without asthma’ the disease. More adults with asthma reported “often” or “sometimes” feeling fearful, isolated, depressed, angry or embarrassed than adults without asthma. In addition, asthma episodes can be so severe that approximately a third of asthma patients surveyed reported having an asthmaepisode so bad that they felt their life was in danger. One in five asthma patients surveyed reported they “somewhat” or “strongly” agree that they live in fear of hospitalization or an emergency room visit due to their asthma, and an addi- tional 29 percent of patients surveyed said they “somewhat”or “strongly” agree that fear of asthma exacerbations keeps them from doing the things they want.* Progress in Asthma Management Needed The AIM survey results reveal that asthma patients have low expectations for asthma control and tend to overestimate the level of asthma control that they are achieving. Additionally, physicians and health care providers often use terms that patients are unfamiliar with, such as “exacerbations,” which may lead to ineffective communication with asthma patients. For example, only 24 percent of asthma patients surveyed said they have heard the term “asthma exacerbation,” while 69 percent of family practice References: 1. Asthma Insight and Management (AIM)Survey: Executive Summary. 2009. 2.“Asthma.” National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Diseases and http:/Awww.nhlbi-nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/Asthma/Asthma_WhatIs.html 38.U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, Annual Social http:/Awww.census.gov/population/www/socdemo/age/age_sex_2008.html @ physicians, 93 percent of pulmonologists and 76 percent ofallergists reported regularly using this term when discussing asthma with their patients.’ “The survey results demonstrate that too many patients may simply accept a high burden of asthma,” said Stuart Stoloff, M.D., AIM physician adviser andclinical professor of family and community medicine, University of Nevada School of Medicine, Reno, Nev. “Through education, physicians can help people with asthma understand current treatment guidelines and help them better manage their asthma symptoms and get back to the daily activities they enjoy.” The AIM survey was sponsored by Schering Corporation; Schering-Plough and Merck & Co., Ine. merged on November 3, 2009. AIM is the largest and most com- prehensive survey of asthma in the United States conducted in more than a decade. AIM surveyed 2,500 patients with current asthma 12 and older, 1,004 adults without asthma and 309 physicians, and was conducted to provide a benchmark on progress in asthma care since the last landmark asthma survey, Asthma in America (AiA), conducted in the United States in 1998.‘ For more detailed information about the AIM survey findings, please visit www.TakingAIMatAsthma.com. Conditions and Index, Economic September Supplement. 2008. 2008.