Secondhand smoke and poor housing conditions can increase asthma symptoms in kids

Publicly released:
Australia; QLD
Photo by Sahej Brar on Unsplash
Photo by Sahej Brar on Unsplash

The risk of asthma symptoms during childhood are increased by poor housing conditions and exposure to tobacco smoke in the home, according to Australian research. The team used data from a long term study of Australian children to look at potential risk factors for asthma symptoms. They say a poor home environment including cluttered homes were associated with higher symptoms, and exposure to tobacco smoke within the home was a risk factor.

Media release

From: The University of Queensland

Harmful home environments are potential risk factors for childhood asthma

Poor family and household environments such as tobacco smoke exposure, clutter, crowding and bad dwelling condition can be risk factors for Australian children developing asthma symptom over time, according to a new study from The University of Queensland.

Asthma, which typically presents with wheezing, is one of the most common chronic childhood illnesses and represents a large health burden in Australia. However, the factors that influence asthma symptoms across childhood are currently poorly understood.

The new UQ study is the first of its kind to investigate asthma symptom over time in Australian children and the associations with family home and household environments.

Led by Life Course Centre researchers at UQ’s Institute for Social Science Research, in collaboration with the Child Health Research Centre at UQ’s Faculty of Medicine, the observational study examined data on 3,846 children from birth to 14-15 years of age.

The study found that some family and household factors were strongly associated with asthma symptom, especially when present in early life, and can lead to persistently high prevalence across childhood.

Exposure to maternal smoking in early childhood years and throughout childhood was the most significant association. Other negative family and household environmental exposures included clutter, large family size, and poor dwelling condition.

“Research to date has mainly focussed on the immediate effects of factors exacerbating asthma symptom, but these factors are dynamic and can change over time in influencing symptom trajectories,” said lead author K M Shahunja, a UQ PhD candidate advised by co-authors Professor Peter Sly and Associate Professor Abdullah Mamun.

“While it is estimated that one in 10 Australian children suffer from asthma symptoms, our study showed that one-third of children have ‘transient high’ or ‘persistent high’ prevalence of wheezing across their childhood.”

Associate Professor Mamun, a Life Course Centre Chief Investigator, said the study findings advance the understanding of the associations and patterns  of childhood asthma symptom and family and household environments by utilising data from Growing Up In Australia: The Longitudinal Study of Australian Children.

“We show that poor home environments increase the risks of asthma symptom in children over time, so improving these environments – in particular, reducing tobacco smoke exposure in the home – can facilitate more favourable childhood asthma symptom patterns ,” he said.

“These findings provide important evidence for policy and practice that addresses the prevalence of asthma symptom in Australian children by taking actions to reduce exposures to harmful family and household environmental factors throughout childhood.”

‘Trajectories of asthma symptom as wheezing and their associations with family environmental factors among children in Australia: evidence from a national birth cohort study’ BMJ Open

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Funder: KMS is supported by a research training scholarship for PhD study funded by the Commonwealth Government of Australia and University of Queensland, AUTHOR PROOF 12 Shahunja KM, et al. BMJ Open 2022;0:e059830. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2021-059830 Open access Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. This organisation had no role in the writing of the manuscript or decision to submit it for publication. As the corresponding author, KMS had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication. This article represents the views of the named authors only and not the views of their institutions.
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