Asthma Follow Up Care: Why You Need It!
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* Follow-up Care is Essential to good asthma control.
* Follow-up allows determination of asthma severity.
* Other disorders that affect your breathing are detected early.
* Rescue medication refills are provided
* Your Asthma Action Plan is updated.
Having your asthma diagnosed is the first step to getting control.
But after treatments are prescribed, follow-up becomes the key to avoiding asthma attacks and controlling your asthma symptoms
Follow-up is so important because asthma is not a disease that is ‘cured’ in the usual sense.
Our goal is to manage and control it!
Asthma control means that:
- you can be active.
- you can sleep well.
- you don’t have to make emergency room visits “routine”.
- you don’t have to experience life-threatening asthma attacks!
Managing asthma means regular, Doctor visits.
We know from research studies that the best interval for these reassessments is about every three months.
At these appointments: We work on a number of points.
.. First, I evaluate your asthma severity to see if it has changed.,
.. We discuss your response to your asthma treatment plan and consider revising it if needed.
.. We will discuss new information relative to your asthma, such as new medications that may be helpful for controlling your symptoms.
.. If needed, I will order changes in the strength or the frequency of your controller or trigger medications.
.. When we have your new plan finalized, I will transmit your medication refills to the pharmacy of your choice, electronically.
.. Then, we review your Asthma Action Plan and I
Send to your phone!
Before we sign-off, I schedule your next appointment, 3 months away.
In this way, Asthmaniac helps you stay on top of your asthma.
Asthmaniac gives you the tools to keep your asthma in control
and for you to become the
expert of your asthma!
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- Do You Need an Asthma Controller Medication?
- Steroids in Asthma: Why We Need Them?
- Children and Asthma: Different from Adult Asthma?
- Asthma Action Plan: Personalized Just For You!
- Phone Doctor Visits: They Work For Asthma Control!
- Peak Expiratory Flow Rate: How We Measure and Why?
- Asthma Control Test Score: How We Use It
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Steroids in Asthma: Why We Need Them?
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* Asthma is present in about 10% of children. * Asthma in children is diagnosed when your child has recurring episodes of wheezing that are relieved by rescue medicine such as albuterol * Asthma in children is treated with the same medicines and treatment...
Asthma Action Plan: Personalized Just For You!
* Your personal Asthma Action Plan is your quick-reference guide telling you how to react to changes in your breathing. * Your plan uses your Peak Expiratory Flow readings and ACT scores to determine if your asthma is in control. * Your Asthma Action Plan...
Phone Doctor Visits: They Work For Asthma Control!
* Quality Asthma care depends on self-management by you - the patient. * A large part of my role as your physician is teaching you these self-management skills. * The techniques you will use to assess your breathing are: * The Asthma Control Test - to...
Peak Expiratory Flow Rate: How We Measure and Why?
* Peak Expiratory Flow is measured by you, several times a week using a small pocket-sized flowmeter * You record the number measured by this devise. * This number shows how well you are able to exhale and tells me if we have your lung inflammation under...
Asthma Control Test Score: How We Use It
* The Asthma Control Test (ACT) is a survey that you fill out about your breathing symptoms. * Your score on this survey will classify your asthma into 3 levels: Well Controlled, Not Well Controlled, and Poorly Controlled * These classifications are used...