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Special
ed students may have high asthma rates
By Anne Harding, Last Updated: 2006-07-28 16:43:56 -0400 (Reuters Health)
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - One in three special education students in
New York City public schools has asthma, compared to just one in five
in the general school population, a new study shows.
"That's a huge number" -- it may be that many children in special
education are there because they have asthma, co-author Dr. Luz Claudio
of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City told Reuters Health.
"Managing that disease successfully may remove them from special
education."
The percentage of kids with asthma in special education was as high as
60 percent in some schools, she added.
Low-income urban children are known to be at greater risk of having their
asthma under poor control, Claudio noted. "It's a manageable chronic
disease," she added, but "our findings show that a lot of kids
from this group are not well managed."
To investigate whether there might be a relationship between having asthma
and being in special education classes, Claudio and her colleague Jeanette
A. Stingone surveyed 24 randomly chosen New York City public elementary
schools via parent questionnaires.
On average, 34 percent of students in special education classes had asthma,
compared with 19 percent of children in the general school population.
The researchers estimated that children with asthma had a 60 percent increased
risk of being in special education compared with children without the
disease.
Claudio and Stingone also found that children with asthma who were in
special education classes were more likely to be low-income and were three
times more likely to have been hospitalized for asthma in the past year,
compared to children with asthma in regular classes.
Asthmatic in special education were also half as likely to use a peak
flow meter (a device that helps patients control asthma by monitoring
their lung function) and 15 percent less likely to use a spacer, a device
that delivers asthma medication to the lungs.
However, it was not exactly clear why the asthma rates were higher among
special education students. While absenteeism due to illness could be
one explanation, Claudio noted, the children in the current study with
asthma who were in special education classes did not have significantly
more school absences than the asthmatic children in regular classes.
"Because children spend so much of their time in school, there is
an opportunity for public health interventions during the school day aimed
at improving asthma control among children who are at risk or already
experience learning difficulties," the researchers write in the September
issue of the American Journal of Public Health.
They are currently evaluating the effectiveness of an asthma management
program based at a school in East Harlem, a neighborhood with one of the
nation's highest rates of childhood
asthma.
SOURCE: American Journal of Public Health, September 2006. http://www.reutershealth.com/archive/2006/07/28/eline/links/20060728elin001.html
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