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CHILDHOOD ASTHMA: THE FUTURE
Asthma is now thought to affect 10 per cent of children in this country and no doubt similar numbers throughout the world. However, it is very important for children and parents to realize that for the vast majority it is a mild, albeit annoying illness. It should be seen more as an inconvenience than as a disease which is going to interfere with the child’s lifestyle and development.
Wherever you go there are success stories to show asthma can be beaten and allow a normal lifestyle. Many famous athletes, including cricketer Ian Botham and Olympic gold medalist Adrian Moorhouse have never let it affect their sport. There are internationally famous rowers, footballers, dancers, opera singers and actors with asthma who have refused to let their wheezing affect their performance.
As well as the famous there are very many boys and girls who have suffered serious breathing difficulties but for whom asthma is no longer a problem. Many of these children run and play at games without the slightest sign of asthma but occasionally need a little help from their medication. As they know that their inhalers are effective they need only pause for a few seconds to take a couple of puffs before returning to their activity.
With asthma we can certainly offer every child complete freedom from the condition with a sensible logical assessment and treatment format. No child should feel that their asthma is keeping them from enjoying life to the full.
If you follow this plan you should have a healthy child with treatment tailored to his or her individual situation. Hopefully, you will never have to see your doctor except for repeat prescriptions of the relevant inhalers. Occasionally you may hit upon a doctor who does not fully grasp the complexities of the condition and may not treat your child vigorously enough. Do not accept second best but find a doctor who is more interested. Equally you may have received sound advice but choose to ignore it because of something someone has said or perhaps a snippet of incorrect information on the television. Please think twice before going off at a tangent, as you are taking a decision on behalf of your child which he or she has no power to understand.
We can be confident now that it is possible to control asthma and limit its effect so it plays little part in marring the quality of life. The perfect answer, however, would be to find a single cure that would rid the world of this condition and make the regular ingestion of different medications totally unnecessary. This is the real aim of the Asthma Research Council, and it is to be hoped that eventually a simple cure will be found.
The main problem in asthma is that the airways are very irritable so that certain stimuli can cause them to narrow. In children who do not suffer from it, their airways are not sensitive, so the same stimuli do not have any effect. Most research is aimed at finding the reason for this sensitivity, as if this can be established then a cure would be much nearer. It seems that there are two important factors and those are a genetic one and an environmental one. Genetic in its broadest sense means the family characteristics handed on from parents to children; undoubtedly if the parents have asthma it is much more likely – though by no means certain – that their children will develop it. The environmental influence includes the effects of cultural habits and lifestyle, or external factors such as climate or exposure to allergens.
*74/211/5*

