Living With Asthma
You can control the impact
asthma has on your child's life by following your
asthma plans consistently. A management plan can reduce
inflammation
to prevent long-term damage to your
child's lungs and decrease the severity, frequency, and duration of
asthma attacks. Your child may have difficulty
following the plan because of its many different factors.
To help
you and your child remain consistent in following your asthma plans:
- Educate yourself and your child about
asthma. By doing so, you can learn to control symptoms and reduce the
risk of your child developing asthma attacks. This
questionnaire can help you and your child determine
what you already know about asthma and what you may need to discuss with your
health professional.
- Understand your child's
barriers and solutions. What may prevent your child
from following his or her plan? These may be physical barriers, such as living
far from your health professional or pharmacy, or emotional barriers, such as
having undiscussed fears about the condition or unrealistic expectations.
Discuss your child's barriers with your health professional and work to find
solutions.
- Develop goals that relate to your child's quality of
life. Being able to measure success gives your child greater motivation to
follow asthma plans consistently. Decide together what you want to be able to
do. Have symptom-free nights? Be able to exercise on a regular basis? Feel
secure in knowing you both can deal with an asthma attack? Work with your
health professional to see if your child's goals are realistic and how to meet
them.
Your child's asthma plans generally consist of the
following:
- Seeing your child's health professional
regularly to
monitor the asthma. The frequency of checkups depends
on how your child's asthma is
classified. Doctors recommend checkups about every 6
to 12 months for mild intermittent or mild persistent asthma that has been
under control for at least 3 months; every 3 to 4 months for moderate
persistent asthma; and every 1 to 2 months for uncontrolled or severe
persistent asthma. Bring your asthma plans to the
appointments.
- Following your child's
daily
asthma treatment plan. The plan helps you prevent or slow development of
the long-term effects of asthma and describes which medications to take every
day. A daily treatment plan also may include an
asthma diary where you and your child record his or
her peak expiratory flows, symptoms, triggers, and
quick-relief medication used for asthma attacks. This valuable tool helps your
health professional manage your child's asthma. A daily asthma treatment plan
is often combined with an asthma action plan.
- Following your
child's
asthma action plan. This contains directions for the
management of asthma attacks at home. It helps you better control your child's
asthma attacks by being aware of symptoms and knowing how to make quick
decisions about medication and treatment. See an
example of an
asthma action plan
(What is a PDF document?).
For more information on how to monitor and treat asthma,
see:
Asthma: Taking charge of your
asthma.
Asthma: Using an asthma action
plan.
To effectively manage your child's asthma and use his or
her daily asthma treatment and action plans, you will have to know how to
monitor peak airflow and identify asthma triggers and see that your child takes
his or her asthma medication correctly.
Monitoring peak expiratory flow
It is easy to
underestimate the severity of asthma symptoms. You and your child may not
notice symptoms until your child's lungs are functioning at 50% of their
personal best measurement. Measuring
peak expiratory flow (PEF) is a way to keep track of
asthma symptoms at home and to know when your child's lung function is becoming
worse before it drops to a dangerously low level. You can do this with a
peak flow meter. This test can easily be done (with
practice) by most children age 5 and older. For more information, see:
Asthma: Measuring peak flow.
Identifying asthma triggers
A
trigger is anything that can lead to an asthma attack.
A trigger can be:
- Irritants in the air, such as tobacco smoke
or air pollution.
- Substances to which your child is allergic (allergens), such as pollen or
animal dander.
- Other factors, such as a
viral infection, exercise, stress, or dry, cold air.
If your child can avoid triggers, he or she may decrease
the chance of having an asthma attack. And, in the case of allergens, avoiding
triggers will help control inflammation in the bronchial tubes. For more
information, see:
Asthma: Identifying your
triggers.
If your child has asthma triggered by an allergen, taking
antihistamine medication may help him or her manage
the allergy and thus limit its effect on asthma.
Taking asthma medication
Taking medications is an
important part of asthma treatment. But because your child often has to take
many different medications, it can be difficult to remember to take them. To
help you and your child remember, understand the reasons people don't take
their asthma medications, and then find
ways to overcome those obstacles, such as taping notes
on the bathroom mirror.
Most medications for asthma are inhaled.
With inhaled medications, a specific dose of the medication can be given
directly to the bronchial tubes, avoiding or decreasing the effects of the
medication on the rest of the body.
Delivery systems for inhaled medications include
metered-dose and dry powder
inhalers and
nebulizers. A metered-dose inhaler (MDI) is used most
often.
Many health professionals recommend that every child who
uses a metered-dose inhaler (MDI) also use a
spacer
, which is attached to the MDI. A spacer may
deliver the medication to your child's lungs better than an inhaler alone, and
for many people is easier to use than an MDI alone. Using a spacer with inhaled
corticosteroids can help reduce their side effects and
result in less use of oral corticosteroids.
If your child is
younger than 3, he or she may not be able to use an MDI alone but, with
assistance, may be able to use an MDI with a mask spacer. Most school-age
children can use an MDI. If your child is having difficulty using an MDI with a
spacer, he or she can use a
nebulizer. Work with your health professional to find
the best delivery system for your child.
It is important to keep
track of the inhaler doses and discard the inhaler when your child has used the
number of doses indicated on the package labeling. This not only prevents your
child from having an empty inhaler when he or she might need medication, but it
also prevents your child from inhaling only propellant after the medication has
run out. For more information, see:
Asthma: Using a metered-dose
inhaler.
Asthma in children: Helping a child use a
metered-dose inhaler and mask spacer.
Asthma: Using a dry powder inhaler.
More tips for managing your child's asthma
To
manage your child's asthma:
- Maintain a daily routine. Make treatment part of
normal, daily activities to help your child adjust to the condition and take
responsibility for managing treatment. Your child could, for example, get used
to taking medicine before brushing his or her teeth.
- Check your child's symptoms. If your child is old
enough to understand the process, teach him or her what symptoms to watch for
and how to check the peak expiratory flow. Help your child understand how to
follow daily treatment and action plans.
- Inform others in your child's life about asthma. Inform the principal, school nurse, teachers, and coaches
at your child's school that your child has asthma. Give the staff a copy of
your child's asthma action plan so that they can help your child to take his or
her medication and will know what to do during an asthma attack. Your child
should be encouraged to participate in exercise and sports. Asthma, when well
controlled, should not prevent your child from participating in sports and
other physical activities.
It is important to treat your child's asthma
attacks quickly. If your child does not improve soon after treating an attack,
talk with a health professional.
- During attacks, stay calm and soothe your
child. This may help your child relax and breathe more
easily.
- Don't underestimate or overestimate how severe your child's
asthma is. It is often hard to know how much breathing difficulty a baby or
small child is having. Seek medical care early for babies and small children
with asthma symptoms.