Am
J Public Health 1996 Oct;86(10):1406-9.
Comment in:
Am J Public Health. 1996 Oct;86(10):1361-2.
Race, asthma, and persistent wheeze in Philadelphia schoolchildren.
Cunningham J, Dockery DW, Speizer FE.
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health,
Boston, Mass 02115, USA.
OBJECTIVES: Many studies show asthma to be more common
in Black than in White children. This study assessed how much of this
difference remains after adjustment for other potentially race-associated
predictors of asthma.
METHODS: We assessed the predictors of active diagnosed
asthma and persistent wheeze in 1416 Black and White Philadelphia children
aged 9 to 11 years, as reported by parents.
RESULTS: Black race remained a significant predictor of active
diagnosed asthma (odds ratio [OR] = 2.3; 95% confidence interval [CI]
= 1.3, 4.1) but not of persistent wheeze (OR = 1.0; 95% CI = 0.6, 1.8).
The excess risk of asthma in Black children was not appreciably altered
by adjustment for other demographic and environmental factors.
CONCLUSIONS: Black race is an important risk factor for
active diagnosed asthma in these urban children, a relationship not explained
by social factors. This finding and the lack of an association of race
with persistent wheeze after adjustment for social factors suggest that
race may be more important to the acquisition of an asthma diagnosis than
to the prevalence of the symptoms.
PMID: 8876509 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Am J Public Health 1996 Oct;86(10):1361-2 Related Articles,
Links
Comment on: Am J Public Health. 1996 Oct;86(10):1406-9.
Social class and asthma--distinguishing
between the disease and the diagnosis.
Gergen P.
Publication Types: Comment; Editorial
PMID: 8876501 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]