Kids with poorly controlled asthma struggle in school, especially those who are ethnic minorities, a new study reports.
Researchers evaluated asthma and allergy status, lung function and school performance of 216 black, Hispanic (Latino) and white children in a U.S. city.
Those with a greater number of daily asthma symptoms had more absences, less school work completed and poorer quality work, according to the study published March 11 in Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, the journal of the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI).
"We found associations between poor asthma status, poorer asthma control, lower lung function, more asthma symptoms and decline in academic performance," lead author Daphne Koinis-Mitchell said in an ACAAI news release.
"These associations were stronger in ethnic minority children, particularly Latino children," she added. Koinis-Mitchell is a research professor of pediatrics, psychiatry and human behavior at Brown University in Providence, R.I.
Poor asthma control could help identify children who might be at risk for problems at school, according to the researchers.
The same team previously found that urban Hispanic children with asthma have special sources of stress.
"Factors such as higher levels of fear of asthma, language barriers, stress related to fitting in to the culture, poorer symptom perception, greater concerns regarding medications and lower medication adherence may put Latinos at greater risk for poor academic performance," Koinis-Mitchell said.
ACAAI president Dr. Todd Mahr, an allergy specialist, noted that asthma is the most common chronic illness in childhood, accounting for 13.8 million missed school days each year in the United States.
"A very low proportion of the children in this study saw specialists, such as allergists," he said in the news release. Many of the kids also had undiagnosed hay fever, which can contribute to poorer asthma outcomes and lower academic success.
"Kids with asthma -- especially in urban areas -- need access to specialty care because anyone with asthma should be able to feel good, be active all day and sleep well at night," Mahr concluded. "No one should accept less."
Parents who find a sex-based text on their teenager's phone should be on the lookout for other problems in their child's life, a new evidence review suggests.
ReplyDeleteTeens who share sexually explicit images are much more likely to be involved in other troubling activities, including unsafe sex, alcohol and drugs.
"The kids who are sexting are engaging in a lot of other risky behaviors," said senior researcher Sheri Madigan, a child development expert from the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada.
"We found that youths who were sexting were approximately four times more likely to be also engaging in sexual intercourse, five times more likely to have multiple sexual partners, and half as likely to be using contraception," she continued.
Also, sexting teens were:
Twice as likely to have symptoms of depression and anxiety.
Two and a half times more likely to be smoking or engaging in delinquent behaviors like stealing or vandalism.
More than three times as likely to be using alcohol or drugs.
But the findings are particularly troubling in light of a 2018 study led by Madigan that found 1 out of 4 teens is receiving sexts, and 1 out of 7 is sending them.
Results from the new review line up with what is already known about teens and sexting, said Sameer Hinduja, co-director of the Cyberbullying Research Center at Florida Atlantic University.
"Many risky behaviors among youth tend to occur in a constellation," he said. "If a teen experiments with one risky behavior, that teen typically has experience with other risky behaviors."
For this study, Madigan and her colleagues collected and combined data from 23 previous studies on sexting, involving nearly 42,000 teenagers.
They found significant links between sexting and sexual activity, risky sexual behavior, symptoms of mood disorders, drug and alcohol use, smoking and delinquency.
DeleteFurther, they found that associations between sexting and either sexual behavior or mood disorders were stronger in younger adolescents, compared to those in their later teens.
It's not clear whether sexting leads to these behaviors, or whether kids inclined to take risks are also more likely to sext, the researchers added. They noted the findings could not prove causation; it only showed an association.
It's very possible that sexting is a gateway that could lead to more experimentation with sex, Madigan said.
"I think sometimes sexting is an initiation into greater sexual behavior," she said. "Sometimes kids use sexting as a starting point. People have called it the modern-day version of flirting."
But other research also has found that when teens are sexting within the confines of a committed relationship, they are not more likely to be engaging in substance abuse and other risk-taking activities, Madigan added.
Those associations are more often found in "youth who are sexting as a method of flirting or sexting in a more casual way," she said.
So what should parents do?
DeleteHazing and cyberbullying expert Susan Lipkins said the "pat answer" is to remind children that anything they share over the internet is out of their control and could be used against them.
Parents should start teaching their kids about privacy and consent as early as possible, even before they have a phone, she and Madigan advised.
Such conversations should include discussion of "what-if" scenarios, Madigan said: What if someone sends you a photo? What if you're asked to send a nude of yourself? What if someone tries to coerce you into sexting? What if you share a nude with a boyfriend or girlfriend and then you break up?
"But the truth is, the kids will learn all that, they will memorize it and repeat it back to you, and then they will do whatever they want," said Lipkins, a psychologist in Port Washington, N.Y.
The best thing adults can do is create a system for reporting sexts and other cyberbullying behavior, one that is anonymous and allows for verification of complaints, she said.
Otherwise, it's really in the hands of the teens themselves, she added.
"The kids themselves have to decide they don't want to participate," Lipkins said. "'We're not going to pass that photo along. No, I don't want it on my device. No, I don't want to get in trouble for having it. No, it is inappropriate, it is disrespectful to whomever, and I'm not going to participate in this behavior.' When they can say that and protect each other and themselves, that's when it's going to end."
The new report was published June 17 in JAMA Pediatrics.