• J Asthma · Jun 2010

    Obesity and asthma morbidity in a community-based adult cohort in a large urban area: the Chicago Initiative to Raise Asthma Health Equity (CHIRAH).

    • Leslie C Grammer, Kevin B Weiss, Jennifer B Pedicano, Linda G Kimmel, Laura S Curtis, Catherine D Catrambone, Christopher S Lyttle, Lisa K Sharp, and Laura S Sadowski.
    • Division of Allergy-Immunology, Department of Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA. l-grammer@northwestern.edu
    • J Asthma. 2010 Jun 1;47(5):491-5.

    BackgroundUrban minority populations experience increased rates of obesity and increased asthma prevalence and severity. Objective. The authors sought to determine whether obesity, as measured by body mass index (BMI), was associated with asthma quality of life or asthma-related emergency department (ED)/urgent care utilization in an urban, community-based sample of adults.MethodsThis is a cross-sectional analysis of 352 adult subjects (age 30.9 +/- 6.1, 77.8% females, forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV(1))% predicted = 87.0% +/- 18.5%) with physician-diagnosed asthma from a community-based Chicago cohort. Outcome variables included the Juniper Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) scores and health care utilization in the previous 12 months. Bivariate tests were used as appropriate to assess the relationship between BMI or obesity status and asthma outcome variables. Multivariate regression analyses were performed to predict asthma outcomes, controlling for demographics, income, depression score, and beta-agonist use.ResultsOne hundred ninety-one (54.3%) adults were obese (BMI > 30 kg/m(2)). Participants with a higher BMI were older (p = .008), African American (p < .001), female (p = .002), or from lower income households (p = .002). BMI was inversely related to overall AQLQ scores (r = -.174, p = .001) as well as to individual domains. In multivariate models, BMI remained an independent predictor of AQLQ. Obese participants were more likely to have received ED/urgent care for asthma than nonobese subjects (odds ratio [OR] = 1.8, p = .036).ConclusionsIn a community-based sample of urban asthmatic adults, obesity was related to worse asthma-specific quality of life and increased ED/urgent care utilization. However, compared to other variables measured such as depression, the contribution of obesity to lower AQLQ scores was relatively modest.

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