Welcome to the Asthma and Allergy SIG Website
SAVE THE DATE: Asthma Awareness Month Webinars
It
takes a team effort to help the one in 12 Americans with asthma breathe
easier. That’s why this May—for World Asthma Day (May 1) and Asthma
Awareness Month 2012—the National Asthma Education and Prevention
Program (NAEPP), coordinated by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute—National Institutes of Health, calls on you to rally with
asthma stakeholders to promote written asthma action plans as a key part
of a comprehensive approach to improving asthma care and control.
Yes,
asthma can be controlled. But it takes an entire community to create
the kind of support and environments that help the growing number of
Americans with asthma, especially those shouldering the greatest burden.
Take a look at some of the latest data from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention:
- In 2001, 1 in 14 people (20 million) had asthma. Eight years later, it's 1 in 12 (25 million).
- In 2009, 1 in 10 children (about 7 million) had asthma.
- Asthma
continues to be more common among women than men. It's also more common
in children, non-Hispanic blacks, Puerto Ricans, people living below
the poverty level, and people in the Northeast and Midwest.
- Asthma accounted for 10.5 million missed school days and 14.2 million lost workdays in 2008.
- U.S.
asthma costs—both direct and indirect—grew from about $53 billion in
2002 to about $56 billion in 2007, nearly a 6 percent increase.
What
can you do? Sign up for the NAEPP/NACI May webinars to learn how asthma
action plans, when taken with five other key actions, can help all
people with asthma live without limits.
Webinar 1
|
Regional Perspectives: Bridging Asthma Disparities through Education
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
12:00-1:30 p.m. Eastern Time
Sign-up page
|
| |
Presenters:
- James P. Kiley, Ph.D.—Director, Division of Lung Diseases; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, NIH; Bethesda, MD
- Michael Lenoir, M.D.—Allergist and Pediatrician; CEO and host of the Ethnic Health America Network; Oakland, CA
- Michelle M. Cloutier, M.D. (East Region)—Pediatric Pulmonologist, Asthma Center, Connecticut Children's Medical Center; Hartford, CT
- Michael Cabana, M.D., M.P.H. (West Region)—Chief, Division of General Pediatrics; University of California, San Francisco, CA
- Michael B. Foggs, M.D. (Midwest Region)—
Chief of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology for Advocate Health Centers
of Advocate Health Care, and immediate past-chair of the National
Medical Association's Allergy, Asthma & Immunology Section; Chicago,
IL
- Leroy Graham, M.D. (South Region)—Pediatric Pulmonologist, Georgia Pediatric Pulmonology Associates, and founder and medical director of Not One More Life, a faith-based asthma initiative; Atlanta, GA
|
Stay tuned for details about a second webinar—Asthma and Physical Activity in the School—to continue the focus on use of AAPs during Asthma Awareness Month.
Also, watch for a new World Asthma Day page on the NAEPP’s National Asthma Control Initiative (NACI) Web site: It will provide you with information and resources that you can use to help someone with asthma.
And don't forget to sign up for the quarterly NACI In the Know eNewsletter.
The NAPNAP Asthma and Allergy SIG introduces the Asthma Toolkit for primary care providers. This toolkit is full of resources for use in diagnosing, treating and managing pediatric asthma with information for healthcare providers & families. This kit includes downloadable and printable information about asthma physiology, asthma triggers, asthma medications, instructional videos and MORE!. Just click on the Toolkit to take advantage of this wonderful resource.

x
The NAPNAP Asthma and Allergy Special Interest Group is dedicated to providing evidence-based education and resources for healthcare providers and families of children and adolescents living with asthma and allergies. Members of our group advocate to improve the health outcomes of children and adolescents and improve the quality of care provided to those most burdened by asthma and allergies. We provide a forum for discussion among our peers, encourage participation in asthma and allergy research and collaborate with the National Respiratory Training Center. Our goal is to advance the role of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners and Advance Practice Nurses as leaders of the asthma and allergy health care team.