TY - JOUR
T1 - Characteristics of patients with asthma within a large HMO
T2 - A comparison by age and gender
AU - Osborne, Molly
AU - Vollmer, William M.
AU - Linton, Kathryn L.P.
AU - Buist, A. Sonia
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - Adequate information about characteristics of asthmatic patients in large health maintenance organizations (HMOs) is still lacking. As part of an ongoing longitudinal study, baseline data were collected on 914 individuals aged 3 to 55 yr with physician-diagnosed asthma within a large HMO, Kaiser Permanente, NW Region. There were no significant differences between men and women in post-bronchodilator FEV1 when expressed as percent (%) predicted yet women with asthma reported more daytime and nocturnal symptoms than men (p = 0.002), and worse quality of life in all but three of 14 subscales in two asthma quality of life instruments. Specifically, women in the 35-55 yr age group uniformly reported worse physical functioning on the SF-36 quality of life scale (71 ± 23 versus 85 ± 18; p = 0.001), social functioning (73 ± 21 versus 77 ± 20; p = 0.016), and bodily pain (63 ± 27 versus 72 ± 24; p < 0.001). Also these women reported use of more health care (p = 0.002) and more medications for asthma than men (p < 0.01). Our data suggest that men and women respond differently to their asthma, and observed gender differences in various measures of asthma such as hospital admissions, quality of life, and use of metered dose inhalers (MDIs), may be related to this difference in response to disease, rather than to real differences in the disease between men and women. Understanding gender related differences in response to a chronic disease such as asthma is important in tailoring an education and management plan to each individual patient.
AB - Adequate information about characteristics of asthmatic patients in large health maintenance organizations (HMOs) is still lacking. As part of an ongoing longitudinal study, baseline data were collected on 914 individuals aged 3 to 55 yr with physician-diagnosed asthma within a large HMO, Kaiser Permanente, NW Region. There were no significant differences between men and women in post-bronchodilator FEV1 when expressed as percent (%) predicted yet women with asthma reported more daytime and nocturnal symptoms than men (p = 0.002), and worse quality of life in all but three of 14 subscales in two asthma quality of life instruments. Specifically, women in the 35-55 yr age group uniformly reported worse physical functioning on the SF-36 quality of life scale (71 ± 23 versus 85 ± 18; p = 0.001), social functioning (73 ± 21 versus 77 ± 20; p = 0.016), and bodily pain (63 ± 27 versus 72 ± 24; p < 0.001). Also these women reported use of more health care (p = 0.002) and more medications for asthma than men (p < 0.01). Our data suggest that men and women respond differently to their asthma, and observed gender differences in various measures of asthma such as hospital admissions, quality of life, and use of metered dose inhalers (MDIs), may be related to this difference in response to disease, rather than to real differences in the disease between men and women. Understanding gender related differences in response to a chronic disease such as asthma is important in tailoring an education and management plan to each individual patient.
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U2 - 10.1164/ajrccm.157.1.9612063
DO - 10.1164/ajrccm.157.1.9612063
M3 - Article
C2 - 9445289
AN - SCOPUS:0031894977
SN - 1073-449X
VL - 157
SP - 123
EP - 128
JO - American Review of Respiratory Disease
JF - American Review of Respiratory Disease
IS - 1
ER -