Journal article

Family size, infections, and asthma prevalence in New Zealand children

KL Wickens, J Crane, TJ Kemp, SJ Lewis, WJ D'Souza, GM Sawyer, ML Stone, SJ Tohill, JC Kennedy, TM Slater, NE Pearce

Epidemiology | LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS | Published : 1999

Abstract

We conducted a prevalence case-control study to investigate the relation between family composition, infection, and development of asthma at age 7-9 years. Potential cases (399) and controls (398) were selected from the Wellington, NZ, arm of the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood, a population-based prevalence study. Further screening questions restricted cases to children with a diagnosis of asthma and current medication use (N = 233) and restricted controls to children without a history of wheezing and no diagnosis of asthma (N = 241). After controlling for confounders (including infections, atopy, and socioeconomic status), family size was strongly related to asthma..

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University of Melbourne Researchers