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| A Comparison of Child and Parent Reporting of Asthma Severity and
Emotional Health From the Child Health Information Reporting Project (CHIRP):
Does Smoke Exposure Matter? Jeralyn Bernier
1, Linda Radecki 2, Lynn M Olson 2, Kevin B Weiss 3 and Robert M Siegel 1. 1Cincinnati Pediatric Research Group, Cincinnati
Children
Background: Unfortunately, children with asthma often
live in homes with smoke exposure. There is no information, however, on whether
smoke exposure relates to how children and their parents perceive the child Objective: To compare how children and their parents
perceive the child Design/Methods: Children 7-16 years of age and one of their
parents completed questionnaires including the Children Results: 203 child-parent pairs have completed the study
to date. 64% of children were male, 49% African American, 35% Caucasian and 12%
were Hispanic. The mean age of the children was 10.7 years. 19% of parents
reported themselves as smokers and 33% of this group smoked near their child.
23% of parents compared to 34% of children reported a smoker in the home,
p<0.001. While parents reported similar scores of their child Conclusions: There is a discrepancy in how children with asthma and parents report smoke exposure. Children who report smoke exposure may be more likely to report emotional health difficulties than non-smoke exposed children. Parents of smoke exposed children may under-report asthma severity and emotional health problems in their children. |
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