NEW
YORK (CNN) -- More than 17 million people across the United States
suffer from it, and the number of cases continues to soar. It's
not cancer or heart disease, but asthma -- and it's rapidly becoming
one of today's major health concerns,especially in New York.
Six-month-old
Tayvon Sanders has asthma, but he's too young to understand what's
the matter. He's just old enough to be terrified by the condition,
which has left him gasping for each breath. His mother is even
more terrified.
"(It's)
scary because I don't know what to expect. You get a fear over
you all the sudden because you don't know what to expect -- the
worst or the best of anything," worried Pearl Sanders.
Dr. Jean
Ford says asthma is a chronic problem
The pediatric
emergency room at Lincoln Hospital in New York's South Bronx treats
around 7,000 children a year with the disease. Many of them, such
as 3-year-old Mark Anthony Pena, visit so regularly that it has
become their second home.
"He knows
his way around. He knows the doctors. Sometimes he even recognizes
the nurses. He knows when he's here it's safe because he's going
to get his treatment. He's going to feel better," said Evaristo
Pena, the boy's father.
But doctors
admit the load can often become overwhelming. Dr. Helen George
said there are times the hospital could use two or three doctors
just to see asthma patients. "We have patients in the holding
area and patients in rooms
just everywhere."
The swelling
and blockage of airways in the lungs, which make it difficult
to breathe, cause asthma. The condition can be controlled if properly
treated, but there is no cure. The number of asthma sufferers
has doubled in the last 20 years, while the number of asthma deaths
has tripled. More than 17 million people in the United States
now have the disease and 5 million of them are children.
Dr. Jean Ford,
who has devoted his career to fighting asthma, called it "a
major public health problem."
"What's
particularly striking about asthma is that a disease that is so
common and so simple to treat, given an understanding of it, is
running rampant like this in our community."
Dr. Jean Ford
"We do
not have a handle on what the reasons are for this dramatic increase
at this point."
Ford heads
the Harlem Lung Center in New York, the city that has become the
nation's asthma capital.
The increase
in asthma has been most dramatic in young people, as well as in
black and Hispanic communities along the East Coast. In New York
City, it's hit hardest in the Bronx, East Harlem and parts of
Brooklyn -- the poorest areas of the city.
Ford noted
that asthma is a constant companion in New York's black and Latin
communities, adding "There are schools that we know of in
New York City where it's not unusual to find that close to 20
percent of the children have been prescribed inhalers."
No one knows
exactly what causes asthma, but pollution, tobacco smoke and cockroach
droppings are on the long list of triggers that can provoke asthma
attacks in people whose lungs are already damaged.
Jackie Brogan
and Alfred Dawkins have five children -- all of them have asthma.
"It hurts.
I never know if it's going to be their last breath. Sometimes
it's so bad, they must be rushed to emergency and I'm praying
that, by the time we get to emergency, my kid is still breathing,"
said Dawkins.
The family
lives in a small, inner city apartment in New York. They are frequent
visitors to the emergency room at their local hospital - most
often bringing their two youngest daughters, Kharysma and Khovani,
who suffer from severe asthma attacks.
"I come
home from work and Kharysma's wheezing, Khovani's wheezing and
they can't breathe, so my immediate reaction is panic. The thing
that I do is I get them dressed and we all rush to Harlem Hospital
emergency -- thank God it's there because if we had to do some
traveling, I think our children wouldn't be here."
The Dawkins'
dependence on their local hospital is typical, according to Ford.
About 70 percent of asthma sufferers in Harlem rely on an emergency
room for a quick fix, but it doesn't help to control the asthma.
Ford noted one frustration among health care workers.
"What's
particularly striking about asthma is that a disease that is so
common and so simple to treat, given an understanding of it, is
running rampant like this in our community."
Treatment
for chronic asthma typically involves taking anti-inflammatory
medicine, usually with an inhaler. But Ford says the problem is
that poor communities such as Harlem and the South Bronx are not
properly equipped, many people don't have health insurance and
don't understand the disease.
School nurse
Shelli Joyner is trying to change that. She uses games and music
to teach third and fourth-graders with asthma how to deal with
the disease.
"A lot
of time they'll come and they won't be able to speak. They're
hyperventilating, they're sweating, they're crying, they're nervous.
They're not talking and, you know, all you want to do is help
them," said Joyner.
One young
asthma sufferer, Justin de Jesus, explained, "It's like my
chest keeps pulling in. I can't breathe at all. I'm afraid they
are going to have to take out my lungs or something."
"I'm
really optimistic that with appropriate resources and commitments
... we're going to see major improvements with time."
Dr. Jean Ford
Joyner believes
that educating asthma patients early can make a real difference.
Her classes are part of the "Open Airways" program sponsored
by the American Lung Association of New York.
"Too
many children have it and too many are dying from asthma. We really
need to get out there and educate the public about this epidemic."
It is a disease
that might one day be eradicated. Researchers at New York's Columbia
University will be monitoring 600 pregnant women for the next
two years. They want to know what kind of asthma triggers the
women were exposed to and how their babies are affected. Scientists
hope to finally pinpoint when asthma begins and what causes it.
"If we
can understand what is triggering that initial change in the immune
system that leads to the development of asthma then it would be
possible in many instances, years down the line, to actually prevent
asthma altogether. I'm really optimistic that with appropriate
resources and commitments on the part of all these groups, we're
going to see major improvements with time," said Ford.
The big question
is whether that improvement will arrive in time to help youngsters
such as Tayvon Sanders and Mark Anthony Pena. If not, they face
a future where just breathing can be a medical emergency.
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