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Epidemiology of Asthma Applied Epidemiology module MSc in Health Sciences 2007-08 Zoe Weir
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Presentation Summary What is asthma? Epidemiology of asthma – Who? – Where? – When? Adult Children EuropeGlobal UK
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What is asthma? Sources: (1)British Guidelines on the Management of Asthma. SIGN guideline, July 2007, (2) Asthma fact sheet, Aug 2006. www.who.int.www.who.int
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What is asthma? Diagnosis = clinical Absence of agreed definition International Consensus Report: – “a chronic inflammatory disorder of the airways.....in susceptible individuals, inflammatory symptoms are usually associated with widespread but variable airflow obstruction and an increase in airway response to a variety of stimuli. Obstruction is often reversible, either spontaneously or with treatment.”
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What is asthma? Shares symptoms with other disease processes – Wheeze – SOB – Chest tightness – Cough Symptoms non-specific Difficult diagnosis in younger children Objective tests are available
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What is asthma? Aetiological factors Host FactorsEnvironmental factors GenesAllergens: mites, animals, pollen SexViral infections ObesityTobacco smoke Occupational : chemicals, animal and plant proteins Air pollution
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Epidemiology of Asthma Person Time Place Routine data sources
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Epidemiology of Asthma Person Time Place Routine data sources ICD-10 classification
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Definition problems... Definitions – WHO – Symptomatic (wheeze, cough, SOB) – “diagnosis” – “those being treated by GP” Definitions – WHEN – “ever” – “current”
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Unhelpful sources of asthma routine data! NEPHO – zilch! APHO – zilch! PHIU – zilch! NHS North East – zilch! Asthma disease register – unable to locate! GPRD – have to pay! Compendium of Health Statistics – have to pay! DOH – one report which unable to access!
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Helpful sources of asthma routine data HES www.statistics.gov.uk/ – Health Statistics Quarterly Health Statistics Quarterly – The Health of Children and Young People The Health of Children and Young People http://www.primis.nottingham.ac.uk/ Health Survey for England http://www.asthma.org.uk/ http://www.laia.ac.uk/about.htm http://www.ecrhs.org/ WHO
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Asthma vs the rest Source: The NHS Information Centre. National Quality and Outcomes Framework Statistics for England 2005/06
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Asthma vs the rest Source: The NHS Information Centre. National Quality and Outcomes Framework Statistics for England 2005/06 QOF limitations GP underdiagnosis of asthma Does not include patient s with asthma who have not received prescribed drugs in last 12 months Patients can only appear on one disease register eg. COPD patients Diagnosis varies with age and between doctors “list inflation” May reflect organisational factors Comparison not standardised Practice-based
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Asthma prevalence (person & time) Source: HSE, 2001
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Asthma prevalence (person) Source: Health Statistics Quarterly, 2004.
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Asthma Prevalence (person & time) 67.7 (67.0-68.4 73.7 (73.0-74.3) 67.3 (66.5-68.0) 76.9 (76.2-77.5) Source: Health Statistics Quarterly, 2004.
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Asthma prevalence (person) Source: PRIMIS+ data
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Asthma prevalence (person) Source: Health Statistics Quarterly, 2004.
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Asthma Prevalence (place) Source: Health Statistics Quarterly, 2004
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Asthma GP consultation rates (person & time) Source: Asthma UK. Where do we stand? Asthma in the UK today. 2004.
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Asthma hospital admission rates (person & time) Source: Asthma UK. Where do we stand? Asthma in the UK today. 2004.
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Finished Consultant Episodes for asthma (person) http://www.hesonline.nhs.uk/
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Finished Consultant Episodes for asthma (person) http://www.hesonline.nhs.uk/
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Finished Consultant Episodes for asthma (person) http://www.hesonline.nhs.uk/ Limitations to hospital activity data Influenced by other factors “episode-based” Not available by practice or area
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Asthma mortality (person & place) Source: Asthma UK. Where do we stand? Asthma in the UK today. 2004.
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Asthma mortality (person & time) Source: Asthma UK. Where do we stand? Asthma in the UK today. 2004.
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CHILDHOOD Source: http://www.statistics.gov.uk/
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GP episodes, hospital admissions, and mortality (under 5’s) GPRD HES ONS
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GP episodes, hospital admissions, and mortality (5-14 yrs)
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EUROPE Sources: (1) Lung and Asthma Information Agency. Severe asthma across Europe. A review of available data. July 2005. (2) ENHIS. Prevalence of asthma and allergies in children. Fact sheet no 3.1, may 2007.
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Prevalence - Children ISAAC
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Data collected from specific centres only, therefore not country-representative. Questionnaire-based (reporting by parents or self- reporting) Limitations to ISAAC data
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Prevalence -Adults ECRHS
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Prevalence -Adults Limitations to ECRHS data Data out-of-date Self-administered postal questionnaire Re: severe symptoms
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Hospital admission rates – adults and children
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Mortality – adults and children UK 2.62 6.50 2.13 6.31
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Mortality – adults and children Limitations to data ICD-9 still in some countries overlap in coding of causes of death between asthma and other LRT diseases “select” countries for comparison
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GLOBAL Source: Global Strategy for Asthma Management and Prevention, Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) 2007. Available from: http://www.ginasthma.org
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World map of prevalence of asthma
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World map of asthma case-fatality rates
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Asthma Prevalence - Global
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Summary (1) Chronic and complex disease. Absence of agreed definition. Clinical diagnosis with non-specific symptoms different definitions data quality affected Routine data sources limited!
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Summary (2) Asthma common condition. Increase in asthma prevalence. Prevalence peaks in the young and old. More children admitted to hospital than adults. Mortality rates higher in females. Weak evidence of association with deprivation. Asthma prevalence high in UK. Asthma has a global effect.
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Exhaustion + frustration!
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