
Time to end secret data laboratories—starting with the CDC
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This editorial is from Lorraine Smith, Jean-Marie Bruzzese, and WWSG thought leader Chris Barton.
Mental health issues are common among patients living with asthma and allergic conditions. A long history of research links asthma and allergy to mood and anxiety disorders. These links include shared biological pathways as well as social and emotional factors that interact with disease progression and self-management by patients and caregivers. Managing depression and anxiety can greatly improve people’s wellbeing and quality of life as well as their asthma and their attitude towards it.
This Research Topic involves a call for studies that offer new and deeper understandings of the relationship between asthma and mental health. It encompasses papers reporting novel insights and links between asthma, allergy and mental health and how mental health and emotion can be managed to enhance self-management and support well-being and quality of life for adults and children living with asthma.
We welcome all article types accepted by Frontiers in Allergy covering, but not limited to, the following themes:
– Personalized medicine and its role in management of mood and anxiety disorders in asthma and allergy
– Novel insights to social determinants of mental health and wellbeing in asthma and allergy
– Longitudinal studies of asthma, allergy and mental health
– Studies of patient experiences of asthma, allergy and mental health
– The impact of asthma and allergy on mental health and well-being of patients’ families/caregivers
As increased, asthma control declined. In contrast, depressive symptoms were 5 not associated with asthma self-management in this study, suggesting that self-management, at 6 least those aspects assessed by the authors, are not an avenue by which depression impacts asthma 7 control in adolescents.
Parents are also important in the management of asthma, and caring for a child with asthma can pose risks to the mental health of caregivers. Because children rely on caregivers to manage medication administration, detecting families who are at risk for poor medication adherence is important to improve asthma outcomes.
Lu et al. investigated the association between asthma routines, family asthma management knowledge and skills, and caregiver depressive symptoms with daily controller medication adherence among Head Start preschool children in Baltimore City.
They found nearly a quarter of caregivers (24%) had clinically significant depressive symptoms and demonstrated that better medication routine and family asthma management is associated with higher medication adherence to daily asthma controller medications in a low-income, urban, preschool group.
Recent experience of people living with asthma has included the need for special care with the emergence of COVID-19.
Respiratory viruses are a common asthma trigger. Regulatory guidelines indicated that individuals with asthma were at higher risk for complications related to COVID-19 and as such should take additional precautions to prevent transmission of COVID-19.
Paradoxically, 24 people with chronic respiratory illnesses tended to have better control of their condition during the 25 pandemic. Although there were positive asthma-related morbidity and healthcare utilization outcomes in the context of the pandemic, less was known about the relationship between pandemic onset and youth and caregiver psychosocial functioning.
This was addressed in the paper by Sinisterra et al., who aimed to characterize youth asthma exacerbations, control, and quality of life across three distinct phases of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as to describe caregiver asthma-30 related quality of life in this context.
They confirm earlier reports of better overall asthma found between the distinct phases of the pandemic for youth living with asthma and ratings of youth asthma-related quality of life remained steadily high, on average, regardless of time of enrolment.
The four papers published in this topic highlight the interplay between family dynamics, routines, and mental health in managing asthma. They emphasise their interconnectedness and offer valuable insights for healthcare providers and families. Collectively, they advance evidence of the need to shift towards a more holistic approach to asthma management. They suggest that interventions should focus on strengthening family support systems, educating families about asthma management, and addressing mental health concerns in both patients and their caregivers. Additionally, recognizing and mitigating the impact of social determinants of health is crucial to improving asthma outcomes, especially for disadvantaged communities.
As our understanding of the interplay between mental health conditions and asthma grows, future asthma management. These might include tailored education, skills training, social support, and collaborative models of care. By taking a more holistic and integrated approach to asthma research and interventions, we can further improve the lives of people living with asthma and their families, across the life course.
Time to end secret data laboratories—starting with the CDC
The American people are waking up to the fact that too many public health leaders have not always been straight with them. Despite housing treasure…
Thought Leader: Marty Makary
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