Asthma-Proofing Your
Home
The
best solutions are not always the expensive ones. What
you need to know
Watching
a child struggle to breathe during an asthma attack is
frightening for any parent. So it is only natural that
most moms and dads will try just about
anything--including spending a lot of money--to keep
an attack at bay. Trouble is, more than half of
parents are trying strategies that simply don't work
and wasting hundreds of dollars in the process,
according to a study published last week in the
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
The
report, based on interviews with the parents of 896
asthmatic children in 10 different cities, contained
some good news. Eighty percent of parents had a handle
on at least one of the triggers that worsened their
children's asthma. After that, however, many parents
seemed to go astray, taking precautions that weren't
helpful "and made little sense," according
to Dr. Michael Cabana, a pediatrician at the
University of Michigan's C.S. Mott Children's
Hospital, who led the study.
One
of the most common mistakes was to buy a mattress
cover to protect against dust mites for a child whose
asthma was exacerbated instead by plant pollen. Many
of those parents then neglected to do what would have
helped a lot more: shut the windows to keep pollen
out. Another was using a humidifier for a child who
was allergic to dust mites; a humidifier tends to be a
place where dust mites like to breed. With those
allergies, a dehumidifier works better.
Worst
of all was the number of smokers with asthmatic
children who didn't even try to quit or at least limit
themselves to smoking outdoors rather than just moving
to another room or the garage. Second-hand smoke has
been proved, over and over again, to be a major
trigger of asthma attacks. Many smoking parents
purchased expensive air filters that have what Cabana
called "questionable utility."
Part
of the problem, Dr. Cabana and his colleagues believe,
is that parents are bombarded by television ads that
encourage them to buy products such as air and carpet
fresheners, ionizers and other remedies that are often
expensive but medically unnecessary. And doctors may
not always take the time, or have the time, to explain
to parents what will and won't work in their child's
particular case. For example, allergies are usually a
problem for older children with asthma, while kids 5
and younger more frequently have trouble with viral
respiratory infections. So make sure you understand
what's really triggering your child's asthma. And
remember, the best solutions are not always the most
expensive ones.
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