Student Well-Being

Asthma Study Prompts Questions About Health Care

By Jessica Portner — May 15, 1996 4 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

A federal study that shows black children die from asthma at a higher rate than white children demonstrates that many African-American families lack adequate medical care, child-health experts and educators said last week.

But Carol Johnson, the primary author of the CDC report, said the higher incident rate among young black children is not readily explained.

Ms. Johnson, an epidemiologist with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, said the climbing mortality rate for all children may be due, in part, to improved diagnosis and better reporting of the disease over the past decade. “It may also be connected to socioeco-nomics,” she said of the higher death rate for black children, “but we should look further to see what is going on.”

Between 1980 and 1993, asthma deaths among people under age 24 in the United States increased 118 percent, according to the report released this month. But in every age category, black children died from asthma at a higher rate than their white counterparts.

From birth to age 4, blacks were six times more likely than whites to die from asthma in 1993, the study found. During the same year, black children between 5 and 14 were four times more likely than their white peers to die from the condition.

Asthma is the most common chronic disease in childhood and one of the leading causes of absences from school, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics in Elk Grove Village, Ill. In 1994, 4.8 million out of the 68 million U.S. children younger than 18 reported having asthma attacks.

Though there is no known cause, the illness--a lung disorder in which air tubes become inflamed and stifle breathing--is thought to have a genetic component and also may be triggered by respiratory infections in childhood, according to the CDC researchers.

Asthma attacks are aggravated by environmental factors, such as inadequate ventilation in housing, household dust mites, and tobacco smoke. Molds and other allergens, including cockroach antigens, can trigger bouts of coughing and wheezing in asthmatics, as can stress.

Doctors often treat asthma patients with anti-inflammatories and inhalers that decrease swelling and open clogged breathing tubes. But if the condition goes untreated, it can quickly become life-threatening.

Poverty and Pollutants

Some education groups and child-health experts said last week that the report clearly underscores the fact that many black families lack adequate health insurance and, as a result, fail to seek medical assistance until a condition is serious.

“Minorities don’t get access to providers oftentimes, and they don’t get continuity of care,” said LeRoy M. Graham, a pediatric lung specialist in Atlanta who is affiliated with the American Lung Association.

“The sad tragedy is that 90 percent of asthma deaths are preventable,” Mr. Graham said.

“If these children could have gotten health care, they wouldn’t have died,” said Stan Dorn, the director of the health division for the Children’s Defense Fund, a child-advocacy group based in Washington.

Mr. Dorn said toxic environmental hazards such as lead paint and air pollution prevalent in many poor urban areas that are predominantly African-American also may help explain the higher asthma mortality rate among black children.

Gwendolyn J. Cooke, the director of urban services for the 43,000-member National Association of Secondary School Principals in Reston, Va., said that the CDC study is disturbing because when children arrive at school they should be healthy and prepared to learn.

“A child who comes wheezing into class can’t concentrate and can’t achieve,” she said.

Ms. Cooke said that better education about the causes of health problems such as these is needed in schools and that the community-based health centers that many poor inner-city residents rely on need to redouble their efforts to identify and treat asthma.

Deaths From Asthma

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta has released a report documenting an increase in deaths and hospitalizations linked to asthma, the most common long-term childhood illness in the United States.

The disorder is characterized by wheezing, coughing, and breathing difficulty and has been associated with socioeconomic and environmental factors, among others. These include outdoor air pollutants such as ozone and sulfur dioxide, indoor pollutants such as tobacco smoke, and allergens such as dust mites. According to the CDC report:

  • From 1980 to 1993, the asthma death rate among all people from birth to age 24 increased 118 percent, from 1.7 deaths per million to 3.7 deaths per million.
  • Blacks ages 15 to 24 had the highest asthma death rate: From 1980 to 1993, it increased 129 percent, jumping from 8.2 deaths per million to 18.8 deaths per million. The corresponding rate for whites in that age group increased 125 percent but involved far fewer deaths: In 1980, the rate was 1.6 deaths per million; by 1993, it had increased to 3.6 per million.

SOURCE: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Related Tags:

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Special Education Webinar
Taking Action: Three Keys to an Effective Multitiered System to Supports
Join renowned intervention experts, Dr. Luis Cruz and Mike Mattos for a webinar on the 3 essential steps to MTSS success.
Content provided by Solution Tree
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Teaching Webinar
Cohesive Instruction, Connected Schools: Scale Excellence District-Wide with the Right Technology
Ensure all students receive high-quality instruction with a cohesive educational framework. Learn how to empower teachers and leverage technology.
Content provided by Instructure
Recruitment & Retention Webinar Keep Talented Teachers and Improve Student Outcomes
Keep talented teachers and unlock student success with strategic planning based on insights from Apple Education and educational leaders. 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Student Well-Being Are Kids Still Vaping?
The FDA identifies a "monumental public health win," but there's still more work to do.
2 min read
Closeup photo of a white adolescent exhaling smoke from an e-cigarette
iStock/Getty
Student Well-Being What the Research Says More Children Are Living in Poverty. What This Means for Schools
New Census data show children are increasingly vulnerable.
2 min read
Paper cut outs of people with one not included in the chain. On a blue background.
E+/Getty
Student Well-Being Don’t Just Blame Social Media for Kids’ Poor Mental Health—Blame a Lack of Sleep
Research shows that poor sleep leads to poor mental health—a link that experts say is overshadowed by the frenzy over social media.
5 min read
A young Black girl with her head down on a stack of books at her desk in a classroom
E+/Getty
Student Well-Being How Free School Meals Became an Issue Animating the 2024 Election
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has highlighted his state's law to provide free school meals to all students as he campaigns for vice president.
6 min read
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz gets a huge hug from students at Webster Elementary after he signed into law a bill that guarantees free school meals, (breakfast and lunch) for every student in Minnesota's public and charter schools in Minneapolis, on March 17, 2023.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz gets a hug from students at Webster Elementary School in Minneapolis on March 17, 2023, after he signed into law a bill that guarantees free school meals for every student in Minnesota's public and charter schools. Free school meals have become a campaign issue since Walz was named Vice President Kamala Harris' running mate on the Democratic ticket.
Elizabeth Flores/Minneapolis Star Tribune via TNS