Monitoring asthma in children in clinical practice is primarily performed by reviewing disease activity (daytime and night-time symptoms, use of reliever medication, exacerbations requiring frequent use of reliever medication and urgent visits to the healthcare professional) and the impact of the disease on children's daily activities, including sports and play, in a clinical interview. In such an interview, most task force members also discuss adherence to maintenance therapy and the patients' (and parents') views and beliefs on the goals of treatment and the amount of treatment required to achieve those goals. Composite asthma control and quality of life measures, although potentially useful in research, have limited value in clinical practice because they have a short recall window and do not cover the entire spectrum of asthma control. Telemonitoring of children with asthma cannot replace face-to-face follow-up and monitoring because there is no evidence that it is associated with improved health outcomes.

Monitoring asthma in childhood: symptoms, exacerbations and quality of life

Piacentini G
Membro del Collaboration Group
2015-01-01

Abstract

Monitoring asthma in children in clinical practice is primarily performed by reviewing disease activity (daytime and night-time symptoms, use of reliever medication, exacerbations requiring frequent use of reliever medication and urgent visits to the healthcare professional) and the impact of the disease on children's daily activities, including sports and play, in a clinical interview. In such an interview, most task force members also discuss adherence to maintenance therapy and the patients' (and parents') views and beliefs on the goals of treatment and the amount of treatment required to achieve those goals. Composite asthma control and quality of life measures, although potentially useful in research, have limited value in clinical practice because they have a short recall window and do not cover the entire spectrum of asthma control. Telemonitoring of children with asthma cannot replace face-to-face follow-up and monitoring because there is no evidence that it is associated with improved health outcomes.
2015
Activities of Daily Living; Age Factors; Anti-Asthmatic Agents; Asthma; Child; Child, Preschool; Disease Progression; Humans; Infant; Interviews as Topic; Lung; Predictive Value of Tests; Respiratory Function Tests; Risk Factors; Severity of Illness Index; Surveys and Questionnaires; Telemedicine; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome; Decision Support Techniques; Quality of Life
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11562/973935
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