Asthmatic children with anxiety likely to seek emergency care more

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Children with asthma are more likely to be affected by anxiety and depression and those with all the three conditions are twice as likely to seek Emergency Room care, than patients only with the respiratory condition, finds a new study.
In a study published in the journal Pediatrics, researchers incorporated more than 65,000 children and youth with asthma, aged between 6 to 21, and found that 7.7 per cent of participants with both depression and anxiety had a rate of 28 ER visits per 100 child years, controlling for age, gender, insurance type and other chronic illnesses.
This is almost twice the rate of those without depression and anxiety — 16 ER visits per 100 child years.
For asthma patients who just had depression, the rate was lower, with 22 visits per 100 child years, and for those asthma patients who just had anxiety, the rate was 19 visits per 100 child years.
“Asthma self-management is complex, requiring recognition of symptoms, adherence to medication and avoidance of triggers,” said first author Naomi Bardach, MD, MAS, of the University of California, San Francisco, Department of Pediatrics and the Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies. (PTI)

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