News from the FDA/CDC

Black women at highest risk for asthma


 

FROM MMWR

Women are much more likely than men to have asthma, and asthma rates among black women are higher than for other races/ethnicities, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Percentage of adults with asthma, 2017-2018

Among all women aged 18 years and older, 9.7% reported that they currently had asthma in 2017-2018, compared with 5.5% of men, based on age-adjusted data from the National Health Interview Survey.

The proportion of black, non-Hispanic women with asthma, however, was even higher, at 11.4%. White non-Hispanic women were next at 10.3%, followed by Hispanic (7.8%) and Asian (5.0%) women, the CDC reported June 26 in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

The same pattern held for men: 6.2% of black men had asthma in 2017-2018, compared with 5.9% of whites, 3.9% of Hispanics, and 3.3% of Asian men, the CDC said.

SOURCE: MMWR. 2020 Jun 26;69(25):805.

Recommended Reading

Asthma: Newer Tx options mean more targeted therapy
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA approves first generic albuterol inhaler
MDedge Family Medicine
Ragweed SLIT tablets improve asthma outcome scores in patients with allergic rhinoconjunctivitis
MDedge Family Medicine
Omalizumab shown to improve chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps
MDedge Family Medicine
Does vitamin D supplementation reduce asthma exacerbations?
MDedge Family Medicine
Food allergies in children less frequent than expected
MDedge Family Medicine
Prolonged azithromycin Tx for asthma?
MDedge Family Medicine
By the numbers: Asthma-COPD overlap deaths
MDedge Family Medicine
Kids with food allergies the newest victims of COVID-19?
MDedge Family Medicine
Asthma leads spending on avoidable pediatric inpatient stays
MDedge Family Medicine