Suffering from asthma requires a large number of patients involved in the management of self-care and chronic diseases. The focus of this research is to educate and promote the health of asthma patients through nursing intervention. Education is extremely important for asthma patients and includes cooperative partnerships between nurses and patients. Because asthma has a chronic nature, nurses play an important role in identifying the time when asthma is getting worse and educating patients about when to respond appropriately to improve prognosis I will.
Asthma is a chronic (long-term) disease that is difficult to breathe. I can not cure asthma, but I can cure it. With proper treatment, asthmatic patients can live a normal active life (Canadian Lung Association, 2014). There may be many causes of asthma. And it may happen in the family through genetics or through air pollutants in the external environment. One thing to keep in mind is that even if the symptoms are mild, you should not ignore asthma. Untreated or untreated asthma may cause severe dyspnea and rarely cause sudden death. This article will discuss how to deal with children with asthma. The main focus is school-age children, especially 6-year-olds.
Management of asthma with occasional bronchodilators and low- or medium-dose inhaled corticosteroids in many school-age children is not complicated. However, problematic severe asthma may be seen in a small group of pediatric asthma school age. This is a heterogeneous group that requires specific strict follow-up work. This group includes children with a wrong asthma diagnosis, children with asthma other than other diseases, children with asthma, and children with resistant asthma.
Asthma Since the mid-1980s, the incidence of asthma in the United States has soared to an epidemic level, particularly among young children. Approximately 16 million people suffer from asthma in the United States alone. Asthma is a serious chronic disease and can threaten life, but the lung is characterized by a recurrence of bronchoconstriction and causes dyspnea, wheezing, coughing. Researchers have discovered that exposure to pesticides can cause asthma-related poisoning. Low-income people, color people, and children living in the city center have much higher morbidity and mortality due to asthma. According to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Research Institute of National Institutes of Health, African Americans may die from asthma 4-6 times more than Caucasians.