| Literature DB >> 29387439 |
Mohammed O Al Ghobain1, Mohammed AlNemer2, Mohammad Khan1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Misconceptions about medications' safety can lead pregnant women with asthma to stop their medications, resulting in asthma-related neonatal morbidity and mortality. Our aim was to assess the level of pregnancy-related asthma knowledge and education about asthma medications' safety, among women of childbearing age with a history of bronchial asthma.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29387439 PMCID: PMC5775610 DOI: 10.1186/s40733-017-0038-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asthma Res Pract ISSN: 2054-7064
Demographic and Clinical Characteristics of the Study Cohort
| Demographic Characteristic | ||
| Age (years) |
| 32 ± 0.48 |
| Asthma chronicity (years) |
| 11 ± 0.64 |
| Months of gestation |
| 7.00 |
| Current pregnancy | (131) 77.2% | |
| Asthma symptoms during any pregnancy | (136) 79.5% | |
| Educational level | Below university | (89) 52% |
| University and above | (82) 48% | |
| In employment | (57) 33.3% | |
| Asthma medications: | ||
| Short-acting β-agonist | (149) 87.1% | |
| Combination therapy (inhaled corticosteroids/long-acting β-agonist) | (92) 53.8% | |
| Leukotriene-receptor antagonist | (1) 0.6% | |
| Inhaled corticosteroids alone | (11) 6.4% | |
| Theophylline | (0) | |
| Prednisone | (5) 2.9% | |
| Ant-IgE | (0) | |
| No prescribed treatment | (1) 0.6% | |
The level of asthma education and knowledge about medications’ safety and compliance during pregnancy among women of childbearing age with asthma in Saudi Arabia
| Have used asthma medications during pregnancy | (133) 77.8% |
| Believe that asthma medications are safe to use during pregnancy | (121) 70.8% |
| Have received education about asthma | (84) 49.1% |
| Have received education about the safety of asthma medications | (77) 45% |
| Have stopped (or expressed the desire to stop) asthma medications during pregnancy | (80) 46.8% |
| Believe that asthma will harm patient and her baby more than asthma medications | (89) 52% |
| Willing to use medication if a physician provides confirmation of safety in pregnancy | (158) 92.4% |
Bivariate analysis of educational and employment level with knowledge and perception about medications’ safety and compliance during pregnancy among women of childbearing age with asthma in Saudi Arabia
| Education level | Employment | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Below university | University and above (82) | Employed | Not employed | |||
| Patients used asthma medications during pregnancy | (70) 78.7% | (63) 76.8% | 0.775 | (45) 78.9% | (88) 77.2% | 0.795 |
| Patients think asthma medications are safe during pregnancy | (62) 69.7% | (59) 72% | 0.742 | (40) 70.2% | (81) 71.1% | 0.905 |
| Patients received education about asthma | (28) 31.5% | (56) 68.3% | <0.001 | (40) 70.2% | (44) 38.6% | <0.001 |
| Patients educated about the safety of asthma medications | (31) 34.8% | (49) 59.8% | <0.001 | (36) 63.2% | (44) 38.6% | 0.003 |
| Patients stopped (or the will to) of Asthma medications during pregnancy | (47) 52.8% | (44) 53.7% | 0.911 | (24) 42.1% | (56) 49.1% | 0.386 |
| Patients believe that asthma will harm patient and her baby more than asthma medications | (39) 43.8% | (50) 61% | 0.0249 | (38) 66.7% | (51) 44.7% | 0.007 |
| Patients will use medications if a Physician consulted them about medications safety | (85) 95.5% | (73) 89% | 0.110 | (50) 87.7% | (108) 94.7% | 0.128 |