1. Prevalence of childhood asthma in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia in 2009
- Author
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Osamu Arisaka, Sohei Makino, Takeshi Fukuda, Clyde Ito, Shigemi Yoshihara, Narantsetseg Logii, Sarangerel Dashdemberel, Hironori Sagara, and Sonomjants Munkhbayarlakh
- Subjects
Male ,lcsh:Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,Background information ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Allergy ,Epidemiology ,Developing country ,010501 environmental sciences ,Interview survey in Mongolia ,01 natural sciences ,Childhood asthma ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Air Pollution ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Urbanization ,Environmental health ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Air-pollution ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Public Health Surveillance ,Child ,Household smoking ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Asthma ,business.industry ,Respiratory infection ,Mongolia ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,030228 respiratory system ,Female ,lcsh:RC581-607 ,business ,Developed country - Abstract
Background Bronchial asthma is a common but important chronic disease in children in all over the world. To take measures against prevalence of childhood asthma, many researchers have surveyed the actual statuses of childhood asthma in developed countries, but in most Asia–Pacific developing countries including Mongolia such surveys have never been sufficiently conducted until now. We have thought that this survey, though performed in 2009, will give important and meaningful information even now in taking measures to prevent prevailing bronchial asthma in children in Mongolia or the countries under similar statuses. Methods The asthma prevalence and patient background information in Mongolian children aged 6–7 living in Ulaanbaatar were examined using a written questionnaire modified for their parents from that prepared by the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC). Results The estimated prevalence of asthma in Mongolian children was 20.9%. The following 3 risk factors were found to be related to asthma: (1) having allergic rhinitis symptoms, (2) mothers' smoking, and (3) history of severe respiratory infection before 1-year-old. Conclusions The asthma prevalence in Mongolian children was higher than that in the world and Asia–Pacific countries reported by ISAAC. The higher prevalence was probably attributable to households' (especially mothers) smoking in draft-free houses designed for the cold area and severe air-pollution due to rapid industrialization and urbanization in Mongolia. Smoking prohibition in the mother (including family members) and a reduction of exposure to air pollutants are urgently needed to prevent developing childhood asthma.
- Published
- 2016
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