Background: Bronchial asthma is the most frequent chronic childhood disease and can have a marked impact on educational development, activities and quality of life. The AIRMAG survey provides an opportunity to assess asthma and its impact in children in North Africa.
Objective: To describe the prevalence, burden and management of asthma in children in the Maghreb.
Methods: A general population sample was generated using a stratified sampling method based on randomly-generated lists of telephone numbers. The target sample consisted of 10,000 households in each country, which were contacted by telephone. A structured interview was proposed. Two screening questions were asked to identify subjects with asthma. Children who met these criteria were then questioned in more detail about their asthma.
Results: Of 30,350 households contacted, 1090 subjects with asthma were identified, of whom 248 were aged under sixteen and interviewed by proxy. The prevalence of paediatric asthma ranged from 3.5% in Tunisia to 4.4% in Morocco. 22.8% of children were rated as severe persistent and 30.9% as intermittent. Asthma control was adequate in 7.6% of children and unacceptable in 46.2%. Control was best in Tunisia and worst in Morocco. 12.2% had been hospitalised for their asthma in the previous year and 32.9% had needed to attend an emergency department. Short-acting beta-agonists were used by 52.8% of children and prophylactic inhaled corticosteroids (alone or in association with long-acting beta-agonists) by 27.0%.
Conclusions: Asthma has a major impact on the lives of children with asthma in the Maghreb. This could be improved by offering more appropriate care as recommended in the GINA guidelines.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0954-6111(09)70024-1 | DOI Listing |
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