Asthma exacerbations in children immediately following stressful life events: a Cox’s hierarchical regression
Asthma exacerbations in children immediately following stressful life events: a Cox’s hierarchical regression
Background: a recent prospective study of children with asthma employing a within subject, over time analysis using dynamic logistic regression showed that severely negative life events significantly increased the risk of an acute exacerbation during the subsequent 6 week period. The timing of the maximum risk depended on the degree of chronic psychosocial stress also present. A hierarchical Cox regression analysis was undertaken to examine whether there were any immediate effects of negative life events in children without a background of high chronic stress.
Methods: sixty children with verified chronic asthma were followed prospectively for 18 months with continuous monitoring of asthma by daily symptom diaries and peak flow measurements, accompanied by repeated interview assessments of life events. The key outcome measures were asthma exacerbations and severely negative life events.
Results: an immediate effect evident within the first 2 days following a severely negative life event increased the risk of a new asthma attack by a factor of 4.69 (p = 0.00). In the period 3–10 days after a severe event there was no increased risk of an asthma attack (p = 0.5). In addition to the immediate effect, an increased risk of 1.81 was found 5–7 weeks after a severe event (p = 0.002). This is consistent with earlier findings. There was a statistically significant variation due to unobserved factors in the incidence of asthma attacks between the children.
Conclusion: the use of statistical methods capable of investigating short time lags showed that stressful life events significantly increase the risk of a new asthma attack immediately after the event; a more delayed increase in risk was also evident 5–7 weeks later.
1046-1051
Sandberg, S.
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Jarvenpaa, S.
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Penttinen, A.
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Paton, J. Y.
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McCann, Donna C.
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December 2004
Sandberg, S.
cc21d114-efce-4ae8-96d2-7f0ebce94500
Jarvenpaa, S.
50f7eede-5acb-42e0-a573-89ba2abda7de
Penttinen, A.
d014058f-9224-476c-97f8-bc3c4f142523
Paton, J. Y.
df3d5306-76ba-4277-b8cc-fb054ce13e23
McCann, Donna C.
48792fe1-241f-491b-a5a5-61c8c02c314d
Sandberg, S., Jarvenpaa, S., Penttinen, A., Paton, J. Y. and McCann, Donna C.
(2004)
Asthma exacerbations in children immediately following stressful life events: a Cox’s hierarchical regression.
Thorax, 59 (12), .
(doi:10.1136/thx.2004.024604).
Abstract
Background: a recent prospective study of children with asthma employing a within subject, over time analysis using dynamic logistic regression showed that severely negative life events significantly increased the risk of an acute exacerbation during the subsequent 6 week period. The timing of the maximum risk depended on the degree of chronic psychosocial stress also present. A hierarchical Cox regression analysis was undertaken to examine whether there were any immediate effects of negative life events in children without a background of high chronic stress.
Methods: sixty children with verified chronic asthma were followed prospectively for 18 months with continuous monitoring of asthma by daily symptom diaries and peak flow measurements, accompanied by repeated interview assessments of life events. The key outcome measures were asthma exacerbations and severely negative life events.
Results: an immediate effect evident within the first 2 days following a severely negative life event increased the risk of a new asthma attack by a factor of 4.69 (p = 0.00). In the period 3–10 days after a severe event there was no increased risk of an asthma attack (p = 0.5). In addition to the immediate effect, an increased risk of 1.81 was found 5–7 weeks after a severe event (p = 0.002). This is consistent with earlier findings. There was a statistically significant variation due to unobserved factors in the incidence of asthma attacks between the children.
Conclusion: the use of statistical methods capable of investigating short time lags showed that stressful life events significantly increase the risk of a new asthma attack immediately after the event; a more delayed increase in risk was also evident 5–7 weeks later.
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Published date: December 2004
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Local EPrints ID: 146065
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/146065
ISSN: 0040-6376
PURE UUID: efd98c12-3d2b-4d6b-8cb4-c60d7f8423e0
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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2010 10:28
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 00:53
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Author:
S. Sandberg
Author:
S. Jarvenpaa
Author:
A. Penttinen
Author:
J. Y. Paton
Author:
Donna C. McCann
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