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Lessons learned for the study of childhood asthma from the Centers for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research.


The National Children's Study The National Children’s Study (NCS) will examine the effects of environmental influences on the health and development of more than 100,000 children across the United States, following them from before birth until age 21.  will address, among other illnesses, the environmental causes of both incident asthma and exacerbations of asthma in children. Seven of the Centers for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research (Children's Centers), funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) is one of 27 Institutes and Centers of the National Institutes of Health (NIH),which is a component of the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The Director of the NIEHS is Dr. David A. Schwartz.  and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and , conducted studies relating to relating to relate prepconcernant

relating to relate prepbezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc 
 asthma. The design of these studies was diverse and included cohorts, longitudinal studies longitudinal studies,
n.pl the epidemiologic studies that record data from a respresentative sample at repeated intervals over an extended span of time rather than at a single or limited number over a short period.
 of older children, and intervention trials involving asthmatic children. In addition to the general lessons provided regarding the conduct of clinical studies in both urban and rural populations, these studies provide important lessons regarding the successful conduct of community research addressing asthma. They demonstrate that it is necessary and feasible to conduct repeated evaluation of environmental exposures in the home to address environmental exposures relevant to asthma. The time and staff required were usually underestimated by the investigators, but through resourceful re·source·ful  
adj.
Able to act effectively or imaginatively, especially in difficult situations.



re·sourceful·ly adv.
 efforts, the studies were completed with a remarkably high completion rate. The definition of asthma and assessment of disease severity proved to be complex and required a combination of questionnaires, pulmonary function tests Pulmonary Function Test Definition

Pulmonary function tests are a group of procedures that measure the function of the lungs, revealing problems in the way a patient breathes.
, and biologic samples for markers of immune response immune response
n.
An integrated bodily response to an antigen, especially one mediated by lymphocytes and involving recognition of antigens by specific antibodies or previously sensitized lymphocytes.
 and disease activity. The definition of asthma was particularly problematic in younger children, who may exhibit typical asthma symptoms sporadically with respiratory infections Noun 1. respiratory infection - any infection of the respiratory tract
respiratory tract infection

infection - the pathological state resulting from the invasion of the body by pathogenic microorganisms
 without developing chronic asthma. Medications confounded the definition of asthma disease activity, and must be repeatedly and systematically estimated. Despite these many challenges, the Children's Centers successfully conducted longterm studies of asthma. Key words: asthma, children, Children's Centers, environmental health, National Children's Study, pregnancy.

**********

In this article we outline information from the Centers for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research (Children's Centers) that have conducted studies related to asthma. We do not include information on sampling strategies because the goal of the monograph mon·o·graph  
n.
A scholarly piece of writing of essay or book length on a specific, often limited subject.

tr.v. mon·o·graphed, mon·o·graph·ing, mon·o·graphs
To write a monograph on.
 is to inform the National Children's Study. Rather, we focus on major issues related to the identification of asthma, asthma-related symptoms and end points, relevant exposures, biologic markers, and follow-up requirements.

Studies of asthmatic children and their homes were conducted at seven Children's Centers. The protocols for these studies are summarized in Table 1, and further information is provided in the introduction to this mini-monograph (Kimmel et al. 2005). The birth cohort studies A cohort study is a form of longitudinal study used in medicine and social science. It is one type of study design.

In medicine, it is usually undertaken to obtain evidence to try to refute the existence of a suspected association between cause and disease; failure to refute
 conducted at two Children's Centers are described more completely by Eskenazi et al. (2005); they are included here because both Children's Centers address respiratory cross-sectional data Cross-sectional data in statistics and econometrics is a type of one-dimensional data set. Cross-sectional data refers to data collected by observing many subjects (such as individuals, firms or countries/regions) at the same point of time, or without regard to differences in time.  and outcomes. In addition, three Children's Centers conducted cohort studies with older children with established asthma, and the study at Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University, mainly at Baltimore, Md. Johns Hopkins in 1867 had a group of his associates incorporated as the trustees of a university and a hospital, endowing each with $3.5 million. Daniel C.  (JHU JHU Johns Hopkins University ) included a nonasthmatic control group as a comparator comparator

Instrument for comparing something with a similar thing or with a standard measure, in particular to measure small displacements in mechanical devices. In astronomy, the blink comparator is used to examine photographic plates for signs of moving bodies.
 in initial observations. Four Children's Centers conducted intervention trials, with diverse designs ranging from a randomized ran·dom·ize  
tr.v. ran·dom·ized, ran·dom·iz·ing, ran·dom·iz·es
To make random in arrangement, especially in order to control the variables in an experiment.
 primary prevention trial in school-age children to formal randomized controlled clinical trials randomized controlled clinical trials,
n.pl medical research studies in which one or more groups are formed by random assignment to treatments and controls. Allows groups to be more equivalent when comparing he effects of treatment.
.

Recruitment of Participants

The studies that recruited children with asthma had key similarities (Table 1). Children were recruited whose parents reported a history of doctor-diagnosed asthma. Other children were recruited as controls. There were few exclusion criteria exclusion criteria AIDS Donor exclusion criteria, see there  in most studies except for other respiratory diseases Noun 1. respiratory disease - a disease affecting the respiratory system
respiratory disorder, respiratory illness

adult respiratory distress syndrome, ARDS, wet lung, white lung - acute lung injury characterized by coughing and rales; inflammation of the
. Because all participants in these studies were minors, the investigators had to obtain informed consent from a parent or other guardian. When recruiting children > 7 years of age, assent An intentional approval of known facts that are offered by another for acceptance; agreement; consent.

Express assent is manifest confirmation of a position for approval.
 was obtained from the child in addition to the consent obtained from a parent or guardian. In the two Children's Centers that conducted birth cohort studies, mothers consented to obtain information regarding their own and their child's medical and exposure histories (Eskenazi et al. 2005). In certain cases, the study setting included prespecified areas of a city bounded by ZIP codes zip code

System of postal-zone codes (zip stands for “zone improvement plan”) introduced in the U.S. in 1963 to improve mail delivery and exploit electronic reading and sorting capabilities.
 or prespecified counties. In other cases, the study setting was defined by participants seeking care at a specific clinic or medical center regardless of where they lived.

Although three studies used local schools (University of Iowa Not to be confused with Iowa State University.
The first faculty offered instruction at the University in March 1855 to students in the Old Mechanics Building, situated where Seashore Hall is now. In September 1855, the student body numbered 124, of which, 41 were women.
, JHU intervention study, University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries. ), most studies identified the sample from a health care setting such as health plans, emergency departments, and physician offices. In schools, the protocol was approved both by an institutional review board (IRB IRB

See: Industrial Revenue Bond
) and by a school system IRB. Informed consent was mailed to the parents to be signed, and followed by a mailed questionnaire in the case of Iowa and Michigan; in the JHU intervention study, the mailed consent was followed by a visit from a recruiter. For other studies, informing and recruiting potential participants included both passive and active methods. The passive approaches included posting study information publicly and providing information when a potential participant's parent or guardian called. These were generally less efficient in generating interested families to participate and generally were considered a supplement to active methods. For the studies of children, most active recruitment consisted of generating patient lists from computerized databases of children who met entry criteria. Study information was then mailed directly to participants, and study staff telephoned sometime later to determine the family's interest, to confirm eligibility, and to initiate the informed consent process.

Barriers to Recruitment

There were several barriers to recruitment of children to the studies. First among these was establishing the essential entry criterion for a diagnosis of asthma. This was a greater issue for those studies recruiting younger children (JHU longitudinal cohort study, Cincinnati) than in those focused on older children [JHU Intervention trial, University of Southern California The U.S. News & World Report ranked USC 27th among all universities in the United States in its 2008 ranking of "America's Best Colleges", also designating it as one of the "most selective universities" for admitting 8,634 of the almost 34,000 who applied for freshman admission  (USC An abbreviation for U.S. Code. ), Michigan, Iowa]. Older children were generally identified by a diagnosis being made by a physician and logged into the computerized database from which recruitment began. In some cases, children with typical asthma were entered into databases with related diagnoses such as recurrent bronchitis bronchitis (brŏnkī`tĭs), inflammation of the mucous membrane of the bronchial tubes. It can be caused by viral or bacterial infections or by allergic reactions to irritants such as tobacco smoke.  or reactive airway disease Reactive Airway Disease (RADS) is a term proposed by S.M. Brooks and colleagues in 1985 [1] to describe an asthma-like syndrome developing after a single exposure to high levels of an irritating vapor, fume, or smoke. , which have slightly different codes in the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision [World Health Organization (WHO) 1978]. Study staff confirmed the diagnosis with screening questionnaires defining appropriate symptoms or with lung function tests Lung function tests
Tests of how much air the lungs can move in and out, and how quickly and efficiently this can be done. Lung function tests are usually done by breathing into a device that measures air flow.

Mentioned in: Pulmonary Fibrosis
. Younger children, who may have had asthmatic respiratory symptoms only during respiratory infections, were more difficult to qualify because they had less specific answers to respiratory questionnaires and could not perform lung function tests. In a birth cohort study, early wheeze wheeze (hwez) a whistling type of continuous sound.

wheeze
v.
To breathe with difficulty, producing a hoarse whistling sound.

n.
A wheezing sound.
 may be recorded, with persistent wheeze or asthma being defined as an outcome later in life. However, entry criteria for the longitudinal cohort studies that recruited younger children used the same definition used with older children: doctor-diagnosed asthma. In a birth cohort study, cough or wheeze may be recorded as an outcome, with persistent wheeze or definable asthma used as an outcome later in life.

An important barrier was introduced by the need to preserve patient autonomy patient autonomy Medical ethics The right of a Pt to have his/her carefully considered choices for health care carried out in a fashion that is consonant with his or her personal philosophy; PA also assumes that, in absence of explicit instructions to the contrary,  and privacy. IRBs have long required investigators to accommodate patients listed on health care databases who do not want to be contacted to participate in research studies. This has usually been accomplished by mailing an invitation letter containing a preaddressed and stamped postcard that families can return requesting that they not be called. In general, this has proven to be a minor barrier, excluding < 5% of identified families. The recently issued Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) was enacted by the U.S. Congress in 1996.

According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) website, Title I of HIPAA protects health insurance coverage for workers and their families when
 (HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191) Also known as the "Kennedy-Kassebaum Act," this U.S. law protects employees' health insurance coverage when they change or lose their jobs (Title I) and provides standards for patient health, ) regulations have introduced additional barriers by requiring that families give permission to use their health information even at preliminary stages of research (e.g., investigators having access to the health care database to obtain lists of children with a diagnosis of asthma). For example, HIPAA makes it illegal to create lists of persons with a specific diagnosis to whom to send an introductory letter and makes the approach used by most of these studies illegal. Various solutions have been developed, including having patients sign general waivers of HIPAA privacy rights as they enroll in a health care program or having their health care provider recommend them to the interviewer at the time of a health care encounter. Other approaches have included asking asthmatic patients or their parents who participate in health fairs, surveys, self-management programs, or other patient care activities to indicate in writing their willingness to participate in future research studies and creating a list of those who have so indicated. IRBs may approve a HIPAA waiver, but the investigators must justify why a waiver is necessary--that is, that the data being gathered are not sensitive, are not able to be linked with individual identifiers, or both are noninvasive non·in·va·sive
adj.
1. Not penetrating the body, as by incision. Used especially of a diagnostic procedure.

2. Not invading healthy tissue.
 and cannot be collected in another way. This requirement also involves clinic personnel, who are much less effective as recruiters that are trained, motivated study staff. Recruitment from school directories avoids these problems because health data are not used to identify potential subjects. One study that recruited from schools did so by conducting a mailed asthma screening survey of 10 school districts (87% response rate) to identify children with asthma (Chrischilles et al. 2004). Another reported a 78% response rate from 9,437 mailings (Lewis et al. 2004).

The two birth cohort studies (University of California at Berkeley (body, education) University of California at Berkeley - (UCB)

See also Berzerkley, BSD.

http://berkeley.edu/.

Note to British and Commonwealth readers: that's /berk'lee/, not /bark'lee/ as in British Received Pronunciation.
, Columbia University Columbia University, mainly in New York City; founded 1754 as King's College by grant of King George II; first college in New York City, fifth oldest in the United States; one of the eight Ivy League institutions. ) recruited pregnant mothers and thus faced the issue of participant identification to a smaller extent. At the time the studies were initiated, the HIPAA regulations had not been activated, so they did not face this issue. Were the studies to be conducted now, recruitment of identified pregnant mothers (with or without asthma) would still have to comply with the HIPAA requirements and, indeed, do so in the continued surveillance of the children.

A final barrier when dealing with families with lower socioeconomic status socioeconomic status,
n the position of an individual on a socio-economic scale that measures such factors as education, income, type of occupation, place of residence, and in some populations, ethnicity and religion.
 is obtaining a reliable means to contact persons on a list. Families move frequently (29% moved at least once during a 1-year observation) (Swartz et al. 2004), so the address and telephone numbers in a database may not be current. Additionally, as many as 25% of inner-city families may not have telephones (Wissow et al. 1988), and 52% may change their telephone number at least once during a year of follow-up (Swartz et al. 2004). This not only makes initial contact difficult but also interferes with follow-up.

Retention

As shown in Table 1, retention rates were generally > 80% in those studies that involved follow-up. A number of barriers had to be overcome to achieve these high rates, including frequent telephone number changes, residential address changes, and general reluctance in making follow-up appointments. The usual solutions to the lack of telephones or frequent changes of telephones and addresses are to maintain frequent contacts with participants (generally every 1-2 months), to ask families for secondary (and tertiaty) alternative contact information, or to provide incentives to notify the study personnel in the event of a change in address or telephone number (Mitchell et al. 1997). Most study staff members were able to conduct home visits even when telephone contact strategies had proven unsuccessful. However, families who moved without providing new contact information interfered with this strategy as well as with follow-up home inspections that were part of several protocols. For some Children's Centers, missed appointments were important barriers to retention. Reasons for missed appointments included inclement in·clem·ent  
adj.
1. Stormy: inclement weather.

2. Showing no clemency; unmerciful.



in·clem
 weather and illness among family members needed to help transport the child, but in many cases no explanation was provided. Some studies categorized cat·e·go·rize  
tr.v. cat·e·go·rized, cat·e·go·riz·ing, cat·e·go·riz·es
To put into a category or categories; classify.



cat
 repeated "no-shows" as having passively withdrawn from the study. This practical measure was necessary to preserve study resources. Children's Centers that conducted the research in the homes of subjects (i.e., did not require participants to come to the study center) also faced appointment cancellations.

The Children's Centers employed multiple strategies to maintain contact with participants and to encourage their continued participation. Commonly used incentives included cash, gift certificates, toys for the children, food stamps food stamp
n.
A stamp or coupon, issued by the government to persons with low incomes, that can be redeemed for food at stores.

Noun 1.
, and infant car seats. A wide variety of gifts were provided, including T-shirts, tote bags, hats, key chains, stuffed animals
For preserved dead animals, see taxidermy.


A stuffed animal is toy animal stuffed with straw, beans, cotton or other similar materials. Some stuffed animals are very old – home made cloth dolls stuffed with straw go back to at least the
, games, and musical instruments. These incentives were provided either at follow-up visits or on successful completion of the study. Additional incentives included health-related devices such as peak flow meters peak flow meter
n.
A portable instrument that detects minute decreases in air flow and that is used by people with asthma to monitor small changes in breathing capacity.
, spacers for metered dose inhalers, and allergen-proof mattress and pillow covers. One Children's Center provided up to $200 as reimbursement Reimbursement

Payment made to someone for out-of-pocket expenses has incurred.
 for electricity costs incurred during the study. The Columbia Children's Center, faced with participants who moved to a new location (e.g., Florida), paid for air travel to do follow-up assessments, and in one case a research worker has flown to the Dominican Republic Dominican Republic (dəmĭn`ĭkən), republic (2005 est. pop. 8,950,000), 18,700 sq mi (48,442 sq km), West Indies, on the eastern two thirds of the island of Hispaniola. The capital and largest city is Santo Domingo.  to obtain follow-up data. The Berkeley Children's Center created a movable laboratory in a recreation vehicle and went on the road once a year to other areas in California to include participants who moved. Another common incentive was to provide reimbursement for travel expenses related to study participation.

In some cases, the incentives had no monetary value but focused on information provided to the family. In the JHU cohort study, participants learned about home environmental measurements, including allergens and pollutants pollutants

see environmental pollution.
; many of these families indicated that this was the principal incentive that attracted them to the study. All investigators felt that the most important factor in participant retention was the Children's Centers' staffs. Retention was highest when the staff members were able to create an empathetic em·pa·thet·ic  
adj.
Empathic.



empa·theti·cal·ly adv.
 bond with the participating families, who felt that the staff would try to help them not only with their child's illness but also with other difficulties associated with their social and economic circumstances. Families frequently sought help with problems such as transportation, referrals, and problems of daily living and valued the "ear" provided by the staff regardless of whether the staff member could actually help with the issue.

Environmental Data

As shown in Table 2, all the Children's Centers employed extensive questionnaires, collecting demographic, social, medical, and environmental exposure data similar to those collected in other studies. These data were collected repeatedly during longitudinal follow-up, although generally in abbreviated questionnaires.

Most Children's Centers conducted ambient Surrounding. For example, ambient temperature and humidity are atmospheric conditions that exist at the moment. See ambient lighting.  air sampling at one or more sites (Table 3). In addition, 'all Children's Centers conducted home visits and in many cases conducted visits repeatedly (see Table 4). At these visits, the participants' homes were formally inspected with checklists and families provided additional information through questionnaires. In most cases, settled dust samples were collected and were assayed for indoor allergens; concentrations of endotoxin Endotoxin

A biologically active substance produced by bacteria and consisting of lipopolysaccharide, a complex macromolecule containing a polysaccharide covalently linked to a unique lipid structure, termed lipid A.
 and pesticides were also measured. Most Children's Centers conducted repeated measures of environmental exposures, including inspection, settled dust sampling, and air sampling; completion rates for these evaluations ranged from 73 to 91%. The data were generally used to describe exposure at the times indicated and was compared with asthma morbidity at these times. Because the data were collected as several time points, time series analyses were conducted.

Biologic Samples

The number of studies that collected blood samples from children was remarkable (Table 5). These samples were generally used for radioallergosorbent tests ra·di·o·al·ler·go·sor·bent test
n. Abbr. RAST
A radioimmunoassay test to detect certain types of immunoglobulin-bound allergens responsible for tissue hypersensitivity.
 (RAST) for specific immunoglobulin E immunoglobulin E
n. Abbr. IgE
The class of antibodies produced in the lungs, skin, and mucous membranes and responsible for allergic reactions.
 (IgE) antibody to supplement or replace skin tests. Prick skin tests and RAST have been shown to correlate well for sensitivity to inhalant inhalant /in·hal·ant/ (in-hal´ant)
1. something meant to be inhaled; see inhalation (def. 3).

2. a class of psychoactive substances whose volatile vapors are subject to abuse.
 allergens (Wood et al. 1999) and food allergens (Sampson and Albergo 1984). When blood is saved for RAST, the investigator has the advantage of being able to test for additional sensitivities that were not considered at the time the study was conducted. The specific sensitivities determined in this manner were essential both to determine that a child was atopic atopic /atop·ic/ (a-top´ik) (ah-top´ik)
1. ectopic.

2. pertaining to atopy; allergic.


atopic

1. displaced; ectopic.

2. pertaining to atopy.
 and to detect specific IgE to the indoor allergens measured in home visits. Atopy atopy /at·o·py/ (at´ah-pe) a genetic predisposition toward the development of immediate hypersensitivity reactions against common environmental antigens (atopic allergy), most commonly manifested as allergic rhinitis but also as , defined as a genetic predisposition genetic predisposition Molecular medicine The tendency to suffer from certain genetic diseases–eg, Huntington's disease, or inherit certain skills–eg, musical talent  to produce long-lived IgE antibody to environmental allergens in association with a constellation Constellation, ship
Constellation (kŏnstĭlā`shən), U.S. frigate, launched in 1797. It was named by President Washington for the constellation of 15 stars in the U.S. flag of that time.
 of chronic diseases including food allergy food allergy Allergy medicine A condition, the incidence of which–0.3-7.5%–is obscured by controversial data and differing disease definitions; food-induced reactions of immediate-hypersensitivity type are common and include anaphylaxis, angioedema, , eczema eczema (ĕk`səmə), acute or chronic skin disease characterized by redness, itching, serum-filled blisters, crusting, and scaling. , allergic rhinitis Allergic Rhinitis Definition

Allergic rhinitis, more commonly referred to as hay fever, is an inflammation of the nasal passages caused by allergic reaction to airborne substances.
, and asthma, is the most important risk factor for both incident asthma and asthma severity. The combination of specific IgE to environmental allergens and the presence of high concentrations of these allergens in the child's home is the strongest known risk factor for asthma severity and morbidity (Rosenstreich et al. 1997).

In addition to blood samples, prick-puncture skin testing was usually done, and samples of meconium meconium /me·co·ni·um/ (mi-ko´ne-um) dark green mucilaginous material in the intestine of the full-term fetus.

me·co·ni·um
n.
1.
, urine, saliva saliva

Thick, colourless fluid constantly present in the mouth, composed of water, mucus, proteins, mineral salts, and amylase, an enzyme that breaks down starches. One to two litres are produced daily by the salivary glands.
, and hair were collected, usually to detect exposure to environmental tobacco smoke environmental tobacco smoke (ETS/passive smoke),
n the gaseous by-product of burning tobacco products, including but not limited to commercially manufactured cigarettes and cigars; contains toxic elements harmful to the health of adults and children
 (ETS ETS Educational Testing Service (nonprofit private educational testing and measurement organization)
ETS Emergency Telecommunications Service
ETS Electronic Trading System
ETS Engineering (&) Technical Services
) and pesticides. What is most remarkable is that biologic samples were collected from children in most Children's Centers on multiple occasions and that these collections did not have noticeable impact on participant retention rates (Table 1).

Asthma Disease Activity

All of these studies included questions regarding asthma disease activity as shown in Table 6. Assessing disease morbidity in epidemiologic studies epidemiologic study A study that compares 2 groups of people who are alike except for one factor, such as exposure to a chemical or the presence of a health effect; the investigators try to determine if any factor is associated with the health effect  of children with asthma involves the creation of a composite of symptoms, health care, and medication use from questionnaires, together with pulmonary function tests in older children (Kattan et al. 1997). Although there is a general consensus about asthma-associated symptoms, there is less agreement with regard to specific questions that provide the most appropriate assessment of these symptoms. Major symptoms include cough, wheeze, chest tightness, and dyspnea dyspnea /dysp·nea/ (disp-ne´ah) labored or difficult breathing.dyspne´ic

paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea
, but these are quite variable day to day and depend on exposures to specific stimuli or "triggers" such as respiratory viruses, allergens, or irritants such as ETS and air pollutants. It is now generally accepted that symptoms should be assessed over 2-week intervals and that questions be framed in terms of the number of days during which these symptoms are experienced rather than frequency per day or symptom intensity. The two most widely used questionnaires were developed by the American Thoracic Society American Thoracic Society (ATS ), established in 1905, is an independently incorporated, international, educational and scientific society, serving its 18,000 members world-wide who are dedicated in respiratory and critical care medicine.  (ATS) (Ferris 1978) and the Children's Health Children's Health Definition

Children's health encompasses the physical, mental, emotional, and social well-being of children from infancy through adolescence.
 Survey for Asthma (CHSA CHSA Chinese Historical Society of America
CHSA Cambridge-Harvard Summer Academy
CHSA Congressional Hispanic Staff Association
CHSA Christleton High School Association
CHSA Crimson Harvard Summer Academy
) (Asmussen et al. 1999).

Several scales have been created to synthesize To create a whole or complete unit from parts or components. See synthesis.  the symptoms into a description of disease activity. The most commonly accepted comes from the National Institute of Health (NIH "Not invented here." See digispeak.

NIH - The United States National Institutes of Health.
)'s National Asthma Education and Prevention Program (NAEPP NAEPP National Asthma Education and Prevention Program ) (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute,
n.pr established in 1948, this division of the National Institutes of Health is responsible for research and education on cardiovascular, pulmonary, systemic diseases, and sleep disorders.
 1997). This scale, summarized in Table 7, was originally intended to categorize cat·e·go·rize  
tr.v. cat·e·go·rized, cat·e·go·riz·ing, cat·e·go·riz·es
To put into a category or categories; classify.



cat
 severity in untreated asthmatics in clinical settings but has been used in epidemiologic studies, as well (Diette et al. 2001). More recently, as the use of daily medication for asthma has become more common, the NAEPP scale has been felt to more appropriately describe disease control rather than severity.

Some of the Children's Centers included questions from the CHSA (Asmussen et al. 1999) or from the pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children.

pe·di·at·ric
adj.
Of or relating to pediatrics.
 version of the ATS questionnaire. The JHU intervention study used the ATS questions as they had been adapted for the Children's Asthma Management Program study (Szefler et al. 2000). The difference between these questionnaires is that the CHSA uses a Likert scale Likert scale A subjective scoring system that allows a person being surveyed to quantify likes and preferences on a 5-point scale, with 1 being the least important, relevant, interesting, most ho-hum, or other, and 5 being most excellent, yeehah important, etc  to define symptom frequency in the preceding 2 weeks, whereas the other questionnaires ask how many days the child had experienced individual symptoms; the reliability of the CHSA is better documented than is the case with other questionnaires. Because of the diurnal diurnal /di·ur·nal/ (di-er´nal) pertaining to or occurring during the daytime, or period of light.

di·ur·nal
adj.
1. Having a 24-hour period or cycle; daily.

2.
 variation in asthma disease activity, symptoms occurring at night and during the day are always considered separately. Symptoms occurring with exercise or on days that the child does not have an upper respiratory tract infection upper respiratory tract infection URI Infectious disease A nonspecific term used to describe acute infections involving the nose, paranasal sinuses, pharynx, and larynx, the prototypic URI is the common cold; flu/influenza is a systemic illness involving the URT  are also recorded separately.

Other aspects of asthma morbidity also recorded in the Children's Centers' investigations included interference with a child's activity (exercise, play, school, sleep), interference with parents' activities, and acute events. The latter were generally defined as those requiring systemic corticosteroid corticosteroid /cor·ti·co·ster·oid/ (-ster´oid) any of the steroids elaborated by the adrenal cortex (excluding the sex hormones) or any synthetic equivalents; divided into two major groups, the glucocorticoids and  use, unscheduled unscheduled
Adjective

not planned or intended

Adj. 1. unscheduled - not scheduled or not on a regular schedule; "an unscheduled meeting"; "the plane made an unscheduled stop at Gander for refueling"
 physician visits, visits to emergency rooms, or hospitalization hospitalization /hos·pi·tal·iza·tion/ (hos?pi-t'l-i-za´shun)
1. the placing of a patient in a hospital for treatment.

2. the term of confinement in a hospital.
. Because these were uncommon events, the recall period was generally longer, that is, 2 months or longer, in almost all Children's Centers.

In the early 1990s, an international group created five core questions regarding childhood asthma to facilitate an international comparison of varying prevalence rates or severity indices. This scale from the International Study of Asthma and Allergy in Childhood (ISAAC Isaac (ī`zək) [Heb.,=laughter], according to the patriarchal narratives of the Book of Genesis, Isaac was the only son of Abraham and Sara. He married Rebecca, and their sons were Esau and Jacob. Ishmael was his half brother. ) (Asher et al. 1995) has widespread support among epidemiologists. The ISAAC core asthma questions were commonly included in the asthma-specific questionnaires used in the Children's Centers' studies.

Juniper et al. (1996, 2000) developed a series of questions to assess the effect of symptoms on a child's quality of life. These provide a composite assessment of disease activity and tend to correlate better with daily lung function measures than do symptom questionnaires. In addition, they have the advantage of providing a single summary number that has proven to be sensitive to change across time, an extremely valuable property in longitudinal cohort studies and interventions.

Pulmonary function tests are important measures of disease activity but correlate modestly with reported symptoms or other measures of morbidity. Daily measures usually are limited to peak expiratory flow rate peak expiratory flow rate (pēkˑ ek·spīˑ·r  (PEFR PEFR,
n See peak expiratory flow rate.

PEFR Peak expiratory flow rate
), although forced expiratory volume forced expiratory volume
n. Abbr. FEV
The maximum volume of air that can be expired from the lungs in a specific time interval when starting from maximum inspiration.
 in 1 sec (FE[V.sub.1]) may also be measured by portable spirometers. Children, parents, and staff must be trained in the use of these devices; most preschool children given training can perform accurate PEFR measures. With proper coaching, 83% of children 3-6 years of age can complete technically acceptable and reproducible maneuvers (Eigen et al. 2001); the Children's Center's experience with technically acceptable data ranged from 52 to 99%.

Medication use both modifies symptoms and provides an independent measure of disease morbidity. Medications that are taken to reverse symptoms of obstruction ["relievers" is the term used in the NIH consensus guidelines guidelines,
n.pl a set of standards, criteria, or specifications to be used or followed in the performance of certain tasks.
 (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute 1997)] are recorded as equivalent to symptoms during a day. Medications that are taken daily ["controllers" in the NIH consensus guidelines (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute 1997)] may modify symptoms, as may medications taken before exercise or other stimuli to prevent attacks. In this setting, it is appropriate to talk about disease "control" rather than "morbidity." Validated scales have been published to describe disease control in adults (Nathan et al. 2004).

Diaries can potentially give more accurate records of disease activity, but retrieval and consistency are problematic. Diaries and periodic questionnaires generally correlate well (Gold et al. 1989), and the studies conducted in the Children's Centers used repeated questionnaires to avoid the logistical lo·gis·tic   also lo·gis·ti·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to symbolic logic.

2. Of or relating to logistics.



[Medieval Latin logisticus, of calculation
 problems of diary retrieval and data verification.

Interventions

Five of the Children's Centers conducted interventions to test the efficacy of environmental control measures on improving indoor environmental exposures and asthma-related health. Strategies employed are summarized in Table 8. Although all Children's Centers emphasized an environmental education program for families, they varied in the breadth and intensity of other components of the intervention programs. Some Children's Centers focused on strategies targeting a few key triggers, whereas others chose a more comprehensive approach. In addition, some Children's Centers chose to supplement home environmental strategies with education for families on asthma management, or education targeting physicians treating the asthmatic children. The relative benefits and challenges of these various strategies remain the subject of intense investigation.

Local Variations

Although childhood asthma is an issue of national and international significance, it is important to remember that it occurs within a local context. Cultural, social, and linguistic factors vary by location, as do systems of health care and community resources. Sources of environmental exposure, housing stock, and population behavior patterns relative to the exposure may vary tremendously. In addition, historical relationships between academia and local communities may range from strained to quite cooperative. Each of these factors influences the way asthma studies and interventions can be practically implemented in any given location. Some of the variation seen in study design between Children's Centers is a direct result of variation in local priorities, circumstances, and resource constraints. What may work in one setting may not be feasible or relevant in another. Each of the Children's Centers described here used a community-based participatory research Community-based participatory research (CBPR) is research that is conducted as an equal partnership between traditionally trained "experts" and members of a community. In CBPR projects, the community participates fully in all aspects of the research process.  approach (Israel et al. 2005) in which community partners contributed significantly to the research process. The Children's Centers universally report that the involvement by community members enhanced their ability to accomplish their research goals. Multicenter studies, such as the proposed National Children's Study, have an additional challenge of balancing the need for protocol uniformity across sites with the very real need to adjust to local contextual issues.

Conclusions: Lessons Learned

The experience gained in the studies conducted by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Children's Centers for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention provide important lessons for the National Children's Study. The lessons that specifically relate to asthma can be summarized as follows:

* Asthma identification requires a combination of questionnaire and physiologic measures. Many validated questionnaires are available to record asthma symptoms in children; these differ in the terms used to describe symptoms and in the period of recall. To allow comparison with previously reported data and to allow data regarding children in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  to be compared with those of children in other countries, it is advisable to include questions from the ISAAC, the ATS, and the CHSA in study questionnaires. In addition to historical information, objective measures such as spirometry Spirometry

The measurement, by a form of gas meter, of volumes of gas that can be moved in or out of the lungs. The classical spirometer is a hollow cylinder (bell) closed at its top.
, eosinophil eosinophil /eo·sin·o·phil/ (e?o-sin´o-fil) a granular leukocyte having a nucleus with two lobes connected by a thread of chromatin, and cytoplasm containing coarse, round granules of uniform size.  counts in peripheral blood peripheral blood Cardiology Blood circulating in the system/body  or secretions, or measures of specific IgE antibody are usually included in definitions of asthma.

* Identification of asthma in preschool-age children is problematic. Many children wheeze or cough with respiratory infections and never wheeze when they are older. These episodes are not considered to be asthmatic, and current methods only modestly predict which infants with wheezing Wheezing Definition

Wheezing is a high-pitched whistling sound associated with labored breathing.
Description

Wheezing occurs when a child or adult tries to breathe deeply through air passages that are narrowed or filled with mucus as a
 will later develop asthma. For this reason, it is appropriate to classify these episodes as recurrent wheezing illness rather than asthma and to reserve the definition of asthma for older children with more persistent symptoms.

* Medication confounds the assessment of asthma symptoms and classification of disease severity. Short-acting [beta]-adrenergic agonists (SABAs) will predictably improve acute asthma symptoms. In questionnaire histories, it is appropriate to equate e·quate  
v. e·quat·ed, e·quat·ing, e·quates

v.tr.
1. To make equal or equivalent.

2. To reduce to a standard or an average; equalize.

3.
 the use of these medications with episodes of asthma; the fact that the SABAs are often used to prevent symptoms introduces uncertainty into this statement. Daily controller medications are used preventively and are currently used in more severe cases, so the use of these medications usually indicates more severe disease; however, the inconsistency in·con·sis·ten·cy  
n. pl. in·con·sis·ten·cies
1. The state or quality of being inconsistent.

2. Something inconsistent: many inconsistencies in your proposal.
 with which these medications are prescribed lends considerable uncertainty to this statement.

* Recruitment and data collection in health care settings require dedicated study staff. The Children's Centers found that health care personnel in clinical settings could not be relied on either to recruit children into the studies or to collect outcome data. This added to the cost of recruiting in clinical settings and, in addition, added to the complexity of collecting health information from patients whose privacy was protected by HIPAA regulations. When accessed in a manner consistent with HIPAA guidelines, medical records can provide useful supplemental information, but in most clinics and hospitals the lack of standardized standardized

pertaining to data that have been submitted to standardization procedures.


standardized morbidity rate
see morbidity rate.

standardized mortality rate
see mortality rate.
 records makes this information less useful.

* There are important longitudinal data to be gained from cohorts of older children. Longitudinal studies provide essential data regarding the sequence of exposure to environmental agents and incidence cases of asthma. Similarly, these studies provide important exposure response data with regard to the sequence of asthma episodes and environmental exposures in symptomatic asthma. Asthma is characteristically variable, so repeated measures are important. The frequency of asthmatic symptom recall and the variability of important environmental stimuli dictate how frequently these data must be recorded. For example, daily symptoms are best explained by environmental measures made during the same days. However, environmental samples have traditionally been collected for several (or many) days to accommodate analytic sensitivity, but paradoxically, it is difficult to attribute symptoms reported on some but not all days during which the measures were made. It also follows that sporadic sporadic /spo·rad·ic/ (spo-rad´ic) occurring singly; widely scattered; not epidemic or endemic.

spo·rad·ic or spo·rad·i·cal
adj.
1. Occurring at irregular intervals.

2.
 events, such as hospitalizations, are difficult to associate with measures averaged over several months.

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In industry, the development and application of standards that make it possible to manufacture a large volume of interchangeable parts. Standardization may focus on engineering standards, such as properties of materials, fits and tolerances, and drafting
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Szefler S J, Weiss S, Tonascia J, for the Childhood Asthma Management Program Research Group. 2000. Long-term effects of budesonide or nedocromil in children with asthma. N Engl J Med 343:1054-1063.

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Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva.
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Wissow LS, Warshow, Box J, Baker D. 1988. Case management and quality assurance of improved care of inner-city children with asthma. Am J Dis Child 142:748-754.

Wood RA, Phipatanakul W, Hamilton RG, Eggleston PA. 1999. A comparison of prick skin tests, intradermal intradermal /in·tra·der·mal/ (-der´mal)
1. within the dermis.

2. intracutaneous.


in·tra·der·mal
adj.
Within or between the layers of the skin.
 skin tests, and RASTs in the diagnosis of cat allergy Cat allergy in humans is an allergic reaction to cat glycoprotein Fel d 1 secreted by the cat's sebaceous glands. Fel d 1 is mostly found in the cat's skin and saliva. . J Allergy Clin Immunol 103:1108-1114.

Peyton A. Eggleston, (1) Greg Diette, (1) Michael Lipsett, (2) Toby lewis, (3) Ira Tager, (4) Rob McConnell Robert Murray Gordon (Rob) McConnell (born February 14, 1935, London, Ontario) is a Canadian jazz valve trombonist, composer, arranger, music educator and recording artist. , (5) Elizabeth Chrischilles, (6) Bruce Lanphear, (7) Rachel Miller, (8) and Jerry Krishnan (1)

(1) Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, located in Baltimore, Maryland, USA, is a highly regarded medical school and biomedical research institute in the United States. , Baltimore, Maryland "Baltimore" redirects here. For the surrounding county, see Baltimore County, Maryland. For other uses, see Baltimore (disambiguation).
Baltimore is an independent city located in the state of Maryland in the United States.
, USA; (2) University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States).  at San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden  School of Medicine, San Francisco, California “San Francisco” redirects here. For other uses, see San Francisco (disambiguation).

The City and County of San Francisco (EN IPA: [sænfrənˈsɪskoʊ] 
, USA; (3) University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, Michigan

“Ann Arbor” redirects here. For other uses, see Ann Arbor (disambiguation).
Ann Arbor is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan and the county seat of Washtenaw County.
, USA; (4) University of California at Berkeley School of Public Health, Berkeley, California Berkeley is a city on the east shore of San Francisco Bay in Northern California, in the United States. Its neighbors to the south are the cities of Oakland and Emeryville. To the north is the city of Albany and the unincorporated community of Kensington. , USA; (5) University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , California, USA; (6) University of Iowa College of Public Health, Ames, Iowa Ames is a city located in the central part of the U.S. state of Iowa, about 30 miles north of Des Moines in Story County. It is the principal city of the 'Ames, Iowa Metropolitan Statistical Area' which encompasses all of Story County, Iowa and which, when combined with the , USA; (7) University of Cincinnati The University of Cincinnati is a coeducational public research university in Cincinnati, Ohio. Ranked as one of America’s top 25 public research universities and in the top 50 of all American research universities,[2]  School of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio “Cincinnati” redirects here. For other uses, see Cincinnati (disambiguation).
Cincinnati is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Hamilton County.
, USA; (8) Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons The Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, abbreviated P&S, is a graduate school of Columbia University located on the health sciences campus in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan. , New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, New York, USA

This article is part of the mini-monograph "Lessons Learned from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Centers for Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research for the National Children's Study."

Address correspondence to P.A. Eggleston, Department of Pediatrics, CMSC CMSC Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers
CMSC Chicago Metropolitan Ski Council
CMSC Certified Medical Staff Coordinator
CMSC Computer Memory Security Check
CMSC California Mine and Safety Code
CMSC Communication Mode Selector Control
CMSC Changan Mazda Motor Sales Co.
 1102, Johns Hopkins Hospital
See also: , , and
The Johns Hopkins Hospital is a teaching hospital in Baltimore, Maryland (USA). It was founded using money from a bequest by philanthropist Johns Hopkins.
, 600 North Wolfe St., Baltimore, MD 21287 USA. Telephone: (410) 955-5883. Fax: (410) 955-0229. E-mail: pegglest@jhmi.edu

We acknowledge the support of the National Children's Study in the development of the articles in this mini-monograph. We also gratefully acknowledge the outstanding, dedicated staff and co-investigators at each of the Children's Centers, the community members who helped shape the studies, and the many families and children who participated.

This work was supported in part by the National institute of Environmental Health Sciences (ES009606, ES09589, ES009605, ES009581, ES09607, ES011261, ES009600) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (R826724, R826710, R826709, R826708, R826711, R829389, R827027).

The authors declare they have no competing financial interests.

Received 12 October 2004; accepted 23 June 2005.
Table 1. Overview of asthma-related studies and intervention.

                       Berkeley           Columbia           USC

Study design         BC                 BC                 LC
Sample size          601 (a)            861 (a)            11,841
(n)
Outcomes             Respiratory        Respiratory        Asthma
                     symptoms,          symptoms,          symptoms
                     atopy,             PFT,
                     medications,       medications,
                     health care        health care
                     use                use
Exposures            Pesticides,        PM, DEP,           Air
                     ETS, dust          PAH, ETS,          pollution,
                     allergens          pesticides,        dust
                     (home and          dust,              allergens,
                     ambient),          allergens,         social
                     dust               social             stressors
                     endotoxin,         stressors
                     social stressor
Retention (%) (c)    86                 90                 78

                      JHU                Michigan           CCH

Study design         LC                 LC                 RCT
Sample size          150 case,          298 (b)            225
(n)                  150 control
Outcomes             Asthma             Asthma             Asthma
                     symptoms,          symptoms,          symptoms,
                     medications,       PEFR               medications,
                     PEFR, health                          health care
                     care use                              use, child
                                                           behavior
Exposures            PM, N[O.sub.2],    PM                 ETS, dust
                     [0.sub.3]          (ambient,          allergens,
                     (home and          home,              social
                     ambient),          personal),         stressors
                     dust               [0.sub.3], ETS
                     allergens,
                     ETS

Retention (%) (c)    83                 67                 96

                         USC              JHU               Iowa

Study design         RCT             RCT                IT
Sample size          202             100                189
(n)
Outcomes             Asthma          Asthma             Asthma
                     symptoms,       symptoms,          symptoms,
                     medications,    medications,       health care
                     health care     health care        use,
                     use             use, FE[V.sub.1]   management
                                                        behaviors
Exposures            Dust            PM, N[O.sub.2],    Dust
                     allergens,      [0.sub.3]          allergens,
                     social          (home and          dust
                     stressors       ambient),          endotoxin,
                                     dust               ETS
                                     allergens,
                                     ETS

Retention (%) (c)    77              93                 76

                       Michigan

Study design         RCT
Sample size          298 (b)
(n)
Outcomes             Asthma
                     symptoms,
                     medications,
                     health care
                     use, PEFR,
                     FE[V.sub.1]
Exposures            Dust
                     allergens,
                     endotoxin,
                     ETS, social
                     stressors

Retention (%) (c)    77

Abbreviations: BC, birth cohort; CCH, Cincinnati Children's Hospital;
DEP, diesel exhaust particles; IT, intervention trial; LC,
longitudinal cohort; N[O.sub.2], nitrogen dioxide; [O.sub.3], ozone;
PAH, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon; PFT, pulmonary function tests;
PM, particulate matter; RCT, randomized controlled clinical trial.

(a) Pregnant women. (b) The same children were studied in the
intervention trial and the longitudinal cohort in Michigan. The two
studies were conducted simultaneously, with the longitudinal
observational study extending follow-up after completion of the
intervention. (c) Time interval for retention varies across studies.

Table 2. Questionnaire information

Characteristic        Berkeley            Columbia          USC: LC

Collection         Pregnancy,           Pregnancy,         Baseline,
schedule           birth, 6, 12, 24,    every 3 months     yearly
                   42 months            until age 24
                   of age               months, every 6
                                        months until 60
                                        months of age
Demographics               x                   x                x
Occupation                 x                   x
Housing                    x                   x                x
characteristics
Pesticide                  x                   x                x
exposure
Allergen                   x                   x                x
exposure
Cleaning habits            x                   x
Social support             x                   x                x
Maternal                   x                   x
depression
Child diet                 x                   x                x
Respiratory                x                   x                x
symptoms
Medication use             x                   x                x
Home remedies              x                   x
Smoking                    x                   x                x
Medical history            x                   x                x
Household                  x                   x                x
income
Pets                       x                   x                x
Child care                 x                   x

Characteristic      JHU: LC       Michigan: LC       CCH

Collection         Baseline,        Baseline,     Baseline,
schedule           3, 6 months      369           day 2, 3,
                                    12, 15, 18    6, 9, 12
                                    21, 24, 27    12.5 months
                                    30 months
Demographics            x                x             x
Occupation              x                              x
Housing                 x                x             x
characteristics
Pesticide
exposure
Allergen                x                x             x
exposure
Cleaning habits                                        x
Social support          x                              x
Maternal                x                              x
depression
Child diet              x
Respiratory             x                x             x
symptoms
Medication use          x                x             x
Home remedies
Smoking                                  x             x
Medical history         x                x             x
Household               x                x             x
income
Pets                    x                x             x
Child care              x

Characteristic     USC: IT       JHU: IT       Iowa       Michigan, IT

Collection         Baseline,    Baseline,    Baseline,      Baseline,
schedule           481216       36912        12 months      12 months
                   20 months    months
Demographics           x           x             x              x
Occupation             x                         x
Housing                x           x             x              x
characteristics
Pesticide                                        x              x
exposure
Allergen               x           x             x              x
exposure
Cleaning habits        x           x             x              x
Social support         x           x             x              x
Maternal                           x                            x
depression
Child diet                         x
Respiratory            x           x             x              x
symptoms
Medication use         x           x             x              x
Home remedies                                    x              x
Smoking                x                                        x
Medical history        x           x             x              x
Household              x           x             x              x
income
Pets                   x           x             x              x
Child care             x           x             x

Abbreviations: BC, birth cohort; CCH, Cincinnati Children's Hospital;
IT, intervention trial; LC, longitudinal cohort.

Table 3. Ambient air sampling

Sample            Berkeley        Columbia      USC: LC       JHU: LC

Collection      Pregnancy,      Personal       Continuous    Baseline,
schedule        6, 12 months    air during     at            6, 12
                and at          pregnancy,     community     months
                community       ambient and    site
                site            indoor at
                                12 months
P[M.sub.10]                                        x            x
P[M.sub.2.5]                         x             x            x
N[O.sub.2]                                         x            x
Ozone                                              x            x
Mold/pollen         x                x
Air nicotine

Sample            Michigan: LC            CCH          JHU: IT

Collection      Baseline, 3, 6,      6, 12 months    Baseline,
schedule        9, 12, 15, 18, 21                    6, 12 months
                24, 27, 30 months
P[M.sub.10]            x                                  x
P[M.sub.2.5]           x                                  x
N[O.sub.2]                                                x
Ozone                  x                                  x
Mold/pollen
Air nicotine                              x

Abbreviations: BC, birth cohort; CCH, Cincinnati Children's Hospital;
IT, intervention trial; LC, longitudinal cohort; PM, particulate
matter; P[M.sub.2.5], PM < 2.5 [micro]m in diameter; P[M.sub.10], PM
< 10 [micro]m in diameter. Samples were not collected in USC: IT,
Iowa, and Michigan: IT.

Table 4. Home evaluation.

Characteristic        Berkeley       Columbia         USC: LC

Collection           Pregnancy,    Pregnancy,       For subsample,
schedule             6, 12, 24     12, 24 months    one time
                     42 months
Age of house
Proximity traffic          x             x                x
Proximity fields           x
Flooring type,             x
condition
Cockroaches                x             x
Rodents                    x             x
Mold                       x             x
Wall moisture              x             x
Peeling paint              x             x
Water damage               x             x
Pets                       x             x
Pesticide use              x             x
Gas stove/heater           x             x
Cleanliness                x
House dust                 x             x                x
 Allergens                 x             x                x
 Pesticide                 x             x
 Endotoxin                 x             x                x
Home air                   x (a)
 P[M.sub.10]
 P[M.sub.2.5]                            x
 N[O.sub.2]                                               x
 Ozone
 Allergen                                x
 Endotoxin
 Nicotine

Characteristic         JHU: LC      Michigan: LC         CCH

Collection           Baseline,      Baseline,        Baseline,
schedule             3, 6 months    12, 24 months    6, 12 months

                          x
Age of house              x               x                x
Proximity traffic                                          x
Proximity fields          x
Flooring type,                            x                x
condition                 x
Cockroaches               x               x                x
Rodents                   x               x                x
Mold                      x               x                x
Wall moisture             x               x                x
Peeling paint             x               x
Water damage              x               x                x
Pets                                      x                x
Pesticide use             x               x
Gas stove/heater          x               x                x
Cleanliness               x               x                x
House dust                x               x                x
 Allergens                                x                x
 Pesticide
 Endotoxin                x               x
Home air                  x               x (b)            x
 P[M.sub.10]              x               x (b)
 P[M.sub.2.5]             x               x (b)
 N[O.sub.2]               x
 Ozone                    x
 Allergen                 x
 Endotoxin                x
 Nicotine                                 x                x

Characteristic         USC: IT          JHU: IT        Iowa

Collection           Baseline,       Baseline        Baseline,
schedule             4, 8, 12, 16    6, 12 months    12 months
                     20 months
Age of house                                             x
Proximity traffic          x               x
Proximity fields           x               x             x
Flooring type,                                           x
condition                                  x
Cockroaches                                              x
Rodents                    x               x             x
Mold                       x               x             x
Wall moisture              x               x             x
Peeling paint              x               x
Water damage                               x             x
Pets                       x               x             x
Pesticide use              x               x             x
Gas stove/heater           x                             x
Cleanliness                x               x             x
House dust                                 x             x
 Allergens                 x               x             x
 Pesticide                 x               x             x
 Endotoxin                 x
Home air                   x
 P[M.sub.10]                               x
 P[M.sub.2.5]                              x
 N[O.sub.2]                                x
 Ozone                                     x
 Allergen                                  x
 Endotoxin                                 x
 Nicotine                                  x

Characteristic       Michigan: IT

Collection            Baseline,
schedule              12 months

Age of house              x
Proximity traffic
Proximity fields
Flooring type,            x
condition
Cockroaches               x
Rodents                   x
Mold                      x
Wall moisture             x
Peeling paint             x
Water damage              x
Pets                      x
Pesticide use             x
Gas stove/heater          x
Cleanliness               x
House dust                x
 Allergens                x
 Pesticide
 Endotoxin                x
Home air                  x
 P[M.sub.10]
 P[M.sub.2.5]
 N[O.sub.2]
 Ozone
 Allergen
 Endotoxin
 Nicotine                 x

Abbreviations: BC, birth cohort; CCH, Cincinnati Children's Hospital,
IT, intervention trial; LC, longitudinal cohort; PM, particulate
matter; P[M.sub.2.5], PM < 2.5 [micro]m in diameter; P[M.sub.10], PM
< 10 [micro]m in diameter.

(a) Mold spores documented. (b) Evaluated at baseline and every 3
months.

Table 5. Biological samples.

Sample           Berkeley         Columbia     JHU: LC     Michigan: LC

Blood         Maternal           Cord blood,   Baseline
              pregnancy and      24, 36,
              delivery; cord     60 months
              blood; 12, 24
              months
Urine         Maternal           Maternal
              pregnancy and      pregnancy,
              delivery; 6, 12,   36, 60
              24, 42 months      months
Meconium
Saliva        42 months
Hair
Skin tests                           x             x            x
BAST                                 x             x

Sample        CCH             USC: IT     JHU: IT     Michigan: IT

Blood         Baseline,                  Baseline,
              6, 12 months               12 months
Urine         6 months                   Baseline
Meconium
Saliva
Hair          Baseline,
              6, 12 months
Skin tests         x             x           x            x
BAST               x             x

Abbreviations: BC, birth control; CCH, Cincinnati Children's Hospital;
IT, intervention trial; LC, longitudinal cohort. Samples were not
collected in USC: LC and Iowa.

Table 6. Asthma disease activity.

Characteristic          Berkeley       Columbia     USC-LC    JHU-LC

Day symptoms                               x           x         x
Night symptoms                             x           x         x
Exercise symptoms                          x           x         x
Activity limited                           x                     x
ISAAC questions (a)         x              x           x         x
Quality of life (a)                        x
Symptom medications         x              x           x         x
Control medications         x              x           x         x
Oral steroids               x              x           x         x
Recall period (b)      6-12 months    3-6 months    1 year
ED visits                   x              x           x         x
Hospitalization             x              x           x         x
Recall period (c)      6-12 months     3 months     1 year    3 months
FE[V.sub.1]                                x           x
Daily FE[V.sub.1]
Daily PEFR                                                       x
Allergy history             x              x           x         x
Family history              x              x           x         x

Characteristic         Michigan-LC       CCH      USC-IT      JHU-IT

Day symptoms                x             x          x           x
Night symptoms              x             x          x           x
Exercise symptoms           x             x          x           x
Activity limited            x             x          x           x
ISAAC questions (a)                                  x           x
Quality of life (a)                       x          x           x
Symptom medications         x             x          x           x
Control medications         x             x          x           x
Oral steroids               x             x          x           x
Recall period (b)         Daily       2 weeks,    8 weeks     2 weeks
                                      3 months
ED visits                   x             x          x           x
Hospitalization             x             x          x           x
Recall period (c)         Daily       3 months    4 months    3 months
FE[V.sub.1]                 x             x          x           x
Daily FE[V.sub.1]           x             x
Daily PEFR                  x             x          x
Allergy history                           x          x           x
Family history                            x          x           x

Characteristic            Iowa       Michigan-IT

Day symptoms                x            x
Night symptoms              x            x
Exercise symptoms           x            x
Activity limited            x            x
ISAAC questions (a)         x            x
Quality of life (a)         x            x
Symptom medications         x            x
Control medications         x            x
Oral steroids               x            x
Recall period (b)        2 weeks      2 weeks

ED visits                   x            x
Hospitalization             x            x
Recall period (c)       2 months     3 months,
                                      1 year
FE[V.sub.1]                 x            x
Daily FE[V.sub.1]                        x
Daily PEFR                               x
Allergy history                          x
Family history              x

Abbreviations: BC, birth cohort; CCH, Cincinnati Children's Hospital;
ED, emergency department; IT, intervention trial; LC, longitudinal
cohort.

(a) One-year recall period for ISAAC, 1-week recall period for
quality-of-life questions. (b) Recall period for symptoms, medications.
(c) Recall period for emergency department, hospitalizations.

Table 7. NAEPP asthma activity classification.

                         Days            Nights           PEFR,
                         with             with         FE[V.sub.1]
Classification         symptoms (a)    symptoms (b)       (%) (c)

Mild intermittent         0-1             0-1              80
Mild persistent           >2               2               80
Moderate persistent      Daily           Weekly           -80
Severe persistent      Constant         >Weekly           -60

(a) Days during previous 2 weeks. (b) Nights during previous month.
(c) Measures as a percentage of normal predicted for age sex, and
race.

Table 8. Interventions.

                                     Cincinnati    USC    JHU

Pest control                             x          x      x
Allergen-proof mattress covers           x                 x
HEPA air cleaners                                          x
Vacuum cleaners with HEPA filters
Cleaning supplies                                          x
Environmental education                  x          x      x
Asthma management education                                x
Smoking cessation                        x          x      x
Physician education
Social support and referrals

                                     Iowa    Michigan

Pest control                                    x
Allergen-proof mattress covers                  x
HEPA air cleaners
Vacuum cleaners with HEPA filters               x
Cleaning supplies                               x
Environmental education               x         x
Asthma management education           x         x (a)
Smoking cessation                               x (a)
Physician education                   x
Social support and referrals                    x

(a) Provided only in a limited fashion.
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Title Annotation:Research/ Mini-Monograph
Author:Krishnan, Jerry
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Oct 1, 2005
Words:7495
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