Asthma in urban Aboriginal children: A cross-sectional study of socio-demographic patterns and associations with pre-natal and current carer smoking
Date
2020
Authors
Skinner, Adam
Falster, Kathleen
Gunasekera, Hasantha
Burgess, Leonie
Sherriff, Simone
Deuis, Margot
Thorn, Allison
Banks, Emily
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Aim: To describe socio-demographic patterns of asthma prevalence in urban Aboriginal children and quantify associations between asthma
prevalence and pre-natal maternal and current carer smoking.
Methods: Analyses used carer-reported survey data for 1290 urban Aboriginal children aged 2–17 years from the Study of Environment on
Aboriginal Resilience and Child Health. Multilevel log-binomial regression was used to estimate asthma prevalence ratios (PRs) for child- and
family-level socio-demographic factors, pre-natal maternal smoking and current carer smoking. Smoking-related PRs were compared with generalpopulation estimates derived from meta-analyses of published cross-sectional data.
Results: Overall, 33.9% of children had ever had asthma, and 12.9% had received treatment for asthma in the past month. Prevalence estimates
declined with increasing household income and increasing household size (posterior probabilities of decreasing trend >0.98), while children
exposed to pre-natal maternal smoking had a higher risk of asthma ever than unexposed children (PR 1.18 (95% credible interval 1.00–1.40)).
Recently treated asthma prevalence was not significantly associated with pre-natal maternal (0.98 (0.71–1.41)) or current carer smoking (0.97
(0.68–1.37)); however, there was substantial uncertainty in our PR estimates, and 95% credible intervals contained general-population estimates
derived from the meta-analyses (1.37 (1.17–1.65) for pre-natal smoking, 1.28 (1.15–1.44) for current parental or household smoking).
Conclusion: Among urban Aboriginal children in the Study of Environment on Aboriginal Resilience and Child Health cohort, asthma prevalence
declines as household income and household size increase, while children exposed to pre-natal maternal smoking are at increased risk of ever
having asthma. Our results emphasise the importance of reducing smoking in Aboriginal communities, particularly among pregnant women.
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Keywords
child, Indigenous, meta-analysis, respiratory, tobacco smoke
Citation
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Source
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health
Type
Journal article
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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