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Asthma and
Allergy Statistics
- In 1994, the estimated number of people
with self-reported asthma in the United States was 14.6 million. The
estimate for 1998 has risen to 17 million [1,2,3].
- Asthma
was
diagnosed more often than any other illness of 468,000 U.S. hospital
admissions in 1993 [1,3].
- In the United States in 1994 , asthma
affected an estimated 4.8 million children (under age 18) out of
an estimated 18 million children. Asthmatic youngsters under age 15 were
hospitalized 159,000 times in 1993, and stayed 3.4 days on average[1,3].
- Asthma
is
only slightly more prevalent in African-American children than in white
children [1]. African-American children with asthma, however,
experience more severe disability and have more frequent
hospitalizations than do white children [4,5].
- Among 5-24 year olds, the asthma
death rate nearly doubled from 1980 to 1993. In 1993, African
Americans in this age group were 4 to 6 times more likely to die from
asthma than whites; and males were 1.5 times at greater risk than
females [1,7].
- Overall, asthma treatment cost an
estimated $6.2 billion in 1990; 43% of that total cost was associated with
emergency room use, hospitalization, and death. Loss of school days, alone,
caused decreased productivity that cost an estimated $1 billion [8].
- Estimates from a skin test survey
suggest that allergies affect more than 50 million people in the
United States [9].
- Allergy testing
accounted
for 1.4 million office visits to physicians in 1991 [10].
- Pollen allergy (hay fever or allergic
rhinitis)
affects an estimated
10% or 26 million Americans, not including those with asthma [11]. Allergic
rhinitis is the reason for 9.2 million office visits to physicians yearly
[12].
- The estimated overall costs of hay
fever in the United States in 1990 totalled $1.8 billion [13].
- Allergic dermatitis
(itchy
rash) is the most common skin condition in children younger than 11
years of age [14]. The percentage of American children diagnosed with it has
increased from 3% in the 1960s to 10% in the 1990s [15].
- Urticaria
(hives;
raised areas of reddened skin that become itchy) and angioedema (swelling
of throat tissues) together affect approximately 15% of the U.S. population
every year [15].
- More than 1,000 systemic allergic
reactions to natural rubber latex, including 15 deaths, were reported to
the FDA between 1988 and 1992. Followups showed the reactions were caused by
residual rubber tree proteins in medical devices such as rubber gloves and
catheters. Most (82%) allergic reactions to latex are caused by rubber
additives [16].
- Chronic sinusitis
affects
nearly 35 million people in the United States [3].
- Allergic drug reactions
,
commonly caused by antibiotics such as penicillin and cephalosporins, occur in
2 to 3% of hospitalized patients [17].
- Eight percent of children
younger than 6 years old experience food intolerance(s). researchers
estimate that up to 2 to 4 percent of all children under 6 have food
allergy.
- A severe allergic reaction known as anaphylaxis
occurs in 3.3% of the U.S. population as a result of insect stings.
At least 40 deaths per year result from insect sting anaphylaxis [18].
References:
- Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, CDC Surveillance Summaries, Morbidity and Mortality
Weekly Report; 47(SS-1), April 24, 1998.
- CDC, Forcasted State-Specific
Estimates of Self-Reported Asthma Prevalence—United States, 1998; MMWR;
47(47):1022-1025, December 4, 1998.
- CDC, Vital and Health
Statistics, Current Estimates from the National Health Interview Survey,
1994 (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service,
National Center for Health Statistics): DHHS Pub. No. PHS 96-1521,
December 1995.
- CDC; Vital and Health
Statistics, National Hospital Discharge Survey: Annual Summary, 1995 (US
DHHS, CDC); DHHS Publication No. PHS 98-1794 (Series 13, no. 133),
1998.
- Taylor, W.R., Newacheck, P.W.:
Impact of Childhood Asthma on Health; Pediatrics; 90(5):657-662,
1992.
- Evans, R.: Asthma Among
Minority children: A Growing Problem; Chest; 101(6):368S-371S, 1992.
- CDC, Asthma Mortality and
Hospitalization Among children and Young Adults, 1980-1993; MMWR,
45(17):350-353, May 3, 1996.
- Weiss, K.B., Gergen, P.J.,
Hodgson, T.A.: An Economic Evaluation of Asthma in the U.S. New England
Journal of Medicine; 326:862-6, 1992.
- Gergen, P.J., Turkeltaub,
P.C., Kaovar, M.G.: The Prevalence of Allergic Skin Reactivity to Eight
Common Allergens in the US Population: Results from the Second National
Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; J. Allergy Clinical Immunol.:
800:669-79, 1987.
- CDC, Vital and Health
Statistics, National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey: 1991 Summary (US DHHS,
PHS, NCHS); DHHS Publication No. PHS 94-1777; May 1994.
- CDC, National Health Survey,
Series 10, Prevalence of Selected Chronic Conditions: United States, 1990-92,
DHHS Pub. No. 97-1522, January 1997.
- CDC/NCHS Vital Health
Statistics, Advanced Data: National Ambulatory Medical Care Summary, 1994,
April 1996.
- McMenamin, P.: Costs of Hay
Fever in the U.S. in 1990. Annals of Allergy; 73:35-39, 1994.
- Lapidus, C.S., Schwarz, D.F.,
Honig, P.J.: Atopic dermatitis in children: Who cares? Who pays? J.
American Academy of Dermatology, 28(5):699-703, 1993.
- Leung, D.Y.M., Diaz, L. A.,
DeLeo, V., Soter, N. A.: Allergic skin disorders and mastocytosis. J.
American Medical Association, 278(22):1914-1923, 1997.
- Sussman, G.L, Beezhold, D.H.:
Allergy to Latex Rubber. Annals Internal Medicine, 122:43-46, 1995.
- Adkinson, N. F., Jr.., Drug
Allergy, in Allergy, Principles and Practice, 5th edition; E.
Middleton et al., Mosby, St. Louis, p.1212, 1998.
- Valentine, M.D., Anaphylaxis
and Stinging Insect Hypersensitivity. JAMA; 268:2830-2833, 1992.
Office of Communications and
Public Liaison
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, MD 20892
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