Prevention
While there is no certain way to prevent
asthma, you can take steps to reduce your child's
airway inflammation
and the likelihood of
asthma attacks.
No one is sure if
breast-feeding affects a child's risk of getting asthma. Some studies show that
breast-feeding protects a child from getting asthma.10, 11 Other studies show that
breast-feeding, especially when mothers with asthma breast-feed, may increase a
child's risk of getting asthma.12 Two large studies
found that breast-feeding had no effect on the development of asthma.13, 14 Mothers are still encouraged to
breast-feed their children for all the other proven health benefits that come
from breast-feeding.
Preventing asthma attacks
The main focus of
prevention is on reducing the number, length, and severity of asthma attacks.
The best way to prevent asthma attacks in your child is to follow your doctor's
recommendations and make sure your child takes asthma control medicines as
directed. By doing this, it is possible, in most cases, to prevent asthma
attacks. Also, by avoiding
triggers, your child may be able to prevent or reduce
the severity of symptoms. For more information on identifying your child's
triggers, see:
-
Asthma: Identifying your triggers.
Controlling symptoms at night
Coughing and wheezing
can wake your child who has asthma. Special problems that might cause night
symptoms include:
- Delayed allergic reactions. Sometimes allergens that get in
the airway can cause problems up to 8 hours later. This is called a late
allergic response (LAR). Talk to your doctor about treating allergies that
affect your child at night. To prevent LAR, you may be able to change your
child’s medicine or the time your child takes it.
- Medicine that
wears off in early morning. If your child’s controller medicine wears off
during sleep, asthma symptoms may cause your child to wake up. If this is a
problem, the doctor may be able to change your child’s dosage or medicine to
make sure it lasts through the night. Adjusting the dose or timing of medicine
your child takes for other problems also may help. Treating a sinus infection,
cold, or allergies can keep your child’s symptoms from occurring at
night.
Talk to your doctor before giving your child any other
medicine. You need to be sure that the medicines your child takes are not
harmful together.
Upper respiratory infections
Upper respiratory infections, including the common cold, cause 85% of asthma attacks in
young children.22 Basic preventive measures include the
following:
- Avoid contact with other people who are ill.
If there is an ill child in the home, separate him or her from other children,
if possible. Put the child in a room alone to sleep.
- If you have a
respiratory infection, such as a cold or the flu, or if you are caring for
someone with a respiratory infection, wash your hands before caring for your
child. Hand-washing eliminates the germs on your hands and the spread of germs
to your child when you touch your child or touch an object he or she might
touch.
- Do not smoke. Secondhand smoke irritates the mucous
membranes in your child's nose, sinuses, and lungs and increases his or her
risk for respiratory infections.
- Children with asthma and their family members should have a flu
shot (influenza vaccine
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Irritants in the air
Common irritants in the air,
such as tobacco smoke and air pollution, can trigger asthma symptoms in some
children.
Controlling tobacco smoke is important because it is a
major cause of asthma symptoms in children and adults. If your child has
asthma, try to avoid being around others who are smoking. And ask people not to
smoke in your house.
- Pregnant women who smoke cigarettes during
pregnancy increase the risk for wheezing in their newborn
babies.
- Exposing young children to secondhand tobacco smoke makes
it more likely that the children will develop asthma and makes symptoms more
severe if the children already have the disease.
Consider keeping your child inside when air pollution
levels are high. Other irritants in the air (such as fumes from gas, oil, or
kerosene, or wood-burning stoves) can sometimes irritate the bronchial tubes.
Avoiding these may reduce asthma symptoms.
Allergens
Your child may be allergic to certain
substances (allergens). You may reduce your child's asthma
symptoms by limiting exposure to those substances.
To help reduce
your child's exposure to allergens:
-
Control cockroaches, especially if you
and your child live in an inner-city area or the southern part of the United
States.
-
Control dust mites. House dust mites have been linked
with the asthma in children.1
-
Control animal dander and pet allergens. If your pet is a known trigger for your child, you may need
to think about giving your pet away. If that is too hard, taking steps such as
keeping your pet out of your child's bedroom and dusting and vacuuming often
may help your child's asthma.
-
Control indoor mold,
especially if you live in an area with high humidity.
It also may be necessary to avoid exposure to other types
of triggers that cause asthma symptoms.
- Control your child's exposure to
pollens in the air. Watch local weather reports or
read the local newspaper for pollen counts in your area.
- Limit your
child's exercise outdoors in cold weather. The air may irritate airways. Have
your child wear a scarf around his or her face and breathe through the
nose.
- Have your child avoid foods that may cause asthma symptoms.
Some children have symptoms after eating processed potatoes, shrimp, or dried
fruit. These foods and liquids contain sulfites, which may cause asthma
symptoms.
- Consider using acetaminophen (such as Tylenol) for pain relief
instead of similar medicines such as ibuprofen if they increase asthma
symptoms. (Do not give aspirin to anyone younger than 20
because of the risk of
Reye syndrome.)
Some research shows that children who have older
siblings or who attend day care may receive some protection from developing
asthma.23 One theory as to the increasing prevalence of
asthma suggests that low exposure to some bacteria and infections may prevent
children's
immune systems from forming the cells necessary to
protect against asthma.