2001
DOI: 10.1183/09031936.01.00099901
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High prevalence of asthma in five remote indigenous communities in Australia

Abstract: Data on the prevalence of asthma in children residing in remote indigenous communities in Australia are sparse, despite the many reports of high prevalence in nonindigenous children of this country. Two previous Australian studies have had poor participation rates, limiting interpretation of their results.A study of children in the Torres Strait and Northern Peninsula Area of Australia was conducted to document the prevalence of asthma symptoms. Five indigenous communities were randomly selected and trained in… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…However, we believe that the current situation is different, particularly as there has been considerable passage of time since Veale et al ’s initial paper 3 . In addition, there might have been a true change in prevalence, regional differences (as we pointed out in our paper), 4 or one disease entity (asthma) may have become more obvious as there has been considerable reorganization of health structures, including vaccination programmes against bacterial organisms, undertaken in these communities. Whatever the reason, it is important to realize that asthma is prevalent in some Indigenous communities.…”
mentioning
confidence: 61%
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“…However, we believe that the current situation is different, particularly as there has been considerable passage of time since Veale et al ’s initial paper 3 . In addition, there might have been a true change in prevalence, regional differences (as we pointed out in our paper), 4 or one disease entity (asthma) may have become more obvious as there has been considerable reorganization of health structures, including vaccination programmes against bacterial organisms, undertaken in these communities. Whatever the reason, it is important to realize that asthma is prevalent in some Indigenous communities.…”
mentioning
confidence: 61%
“…We believe that a health maintenance (chronic illness care) model with appropriate education programmes for the community, administrative and health staff, would greatly benefit these communities. It must be realized that considerable community differences may exist, and, given the disparities between the study by Veale et al 3 and ours, 4 further regional prevalence studies should be carried out in order to understand the extent of the problem. This would lead to the implementation of measures to improve the unacceptably high levels of health problems in Indigenous children.…”
mentioning
confidence: 63%
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“…As study enrolment was slower than anticipated, we modified the intervention allocation based on estimates of asthma prevalence 12 and guided by the sample size and power calculations. If a child was allocated to “additional education” but there was no trained IHCW in the child's community to administer the intervention, we changed the allocation to “no additional education” ( n = 7).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have reported previously that children with asthma in the Torres Strait region of northern Australia have more severe disease than children in urban areas 11 . Building on our previous work in this community, 11 , 12 we conducted a randomised controlled trial of an education intervention by IHCWs for children with asthma.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%