1. Prevalence of active and passive smoking among asthma and asthma-associated emergency admissions: a nationwide prevalence survey study
- Author
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Irina Balan, Syed Nazeer Mahmood, Richa Jaiswal, Yelena Pleshkova, Divya Manivannan, Shayaan Negit, Viraj Shah, Prarthana Desai, Narayana Varalakshmi Akula, Muhammad Umair Nawaz, Namratha Gurram, Raghavendra Tirupathi, Urvish Patel, and Vikramaditya Samala Venkata
- Subjects
General Medicine ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
Asthma affects 7% of children and 8% of adults in the United States. There is a paucity of studies examining the association between passive smoking and an increased risk of asthma exacerbations that led the authors to examine the association between various modes of smoking and rates of asthma exacerbations. A retrospective cross-sectional/case-control study was conducted using the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey dataset (2013–2018). Out of 312,979 respondents, 35,758 (11.43%) had a history of asthma, 9083 (2.9%) had asthma attacks in the past year, and 4731 (1.51%) had asthma-related emergency room admissions in the past year. Prevalence of asthma-related emergency admissions were higher among active cigarette smoking (46.25 vs 35.46%), e-cigarette smoking (26.63 vs 16.07%), and passive smoking at home (37.53 vs 25.67%), workplace passive smoking (14.35 vs 12.11%), in bar (32.38 vs 26.16%), and car (26.21 vs 14.44%) (p
- Published
- 2023