Who remembers whether they had asthma as children?
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 18:25 authored by Burgess, JA, Eugene WaltersEugene Walters, Byrnes, GB, Wharton, CL, Jenkins, MA, Abramson, MJ, Hopper, JL, Dharmage, SPurpose: To assess misclassification in adults reporting childhood asthma. Methods: The Tasmanian Asthma Survey commenced in 1968 when 8,583 7-year-old children attending school in Tasmania (participants) were studied. In 1991-1993, a stratified sample of 1,494 participants was studied. Their recall of childhood asthma was compared to their parents' prospectively gathered report. Results: Where participants had childhood asthma, those with current asthma, severe eczema, or hay fever were less likely to misclassify while females were more likely to misclassify. Where participants had no childhood asthma, misclassification was associated with current asthma, hay fever, or allergies. Conclusions: Retrospective self-assessment of childhood asthma is unreliable. Copyright © 2006 Informa Healthcare.
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Publication title
Journal of AsthmaVolume
43Issue
10Pagination
727-730ISSN
0277-0903Department/School
Tasmanian School of MedicinePublisher
TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC,Place of publication
USASocio-economic Objectives
Clinical health not elsewhere classifiedRepository Status
- Restricted
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