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Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group logoLink to Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group
. 2009 May 19;18(4):279–286. doi: 10.4104/pcrj.2009.00024

Asthma control in primary care in Sweden: a comparison between 2001 and 2005

Bjödrn Ställberg 1,*, Karin Lisspers 1, Mikael Hasselgren 1, Christer Janson 2, Gunnar Johansson 1, Kurt Svärdsudd 1
PMCID: PMC6619358  PMID: 19455269

Abstract

Aim:

To compare the degree of asthma control in 2001 and 2005 in a primary care setting in Sweden.

Method:

Two similar questionnaire surveys were performed in 2001 and 2005 with 1,012 and 224 asthma patients aged 18-45 randomly selected from 42 and 56 primary health care centres, respectively. A classification of asthma control similar to the GINA guidelines was made using information obtained from the questionnaire.

Results:

In 2001, 36.6% had achieved asthma control, 23.8% were partly controlled and 39.6% uncontrolled. In 2005, the corresponding figures were 40.2%, 26.8% and 33.0%, respectively, with no difference between the two surveys (p=0.114). Uncontrolled asthma was more common in women (p<0.001 in the first and p<0.05 in the second survey) and smokers (p<0.01 in the first and p<0.01 in the second survey). The use of combination corticosteroid/long-acting bronchodilator inhalers had increased — 34.2% and 48.2%, respectively (p<0.001) — and many patients used their inhaled corticosteroids periodically.

Conclusion:

In spite of treatment guidelines many patients in Swedish primary care still have insufficient asthma control.

Keywords: asthma, primary care, asthma control, GINA guideline, Sweden, questionnaire surveys

Full Text

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Footnotes

Bjorn Stallberg has been paid for lectures and for consulting from AstraZeneca,


Articles from Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group are provided here courtesy of Primary Care Respiratory Society UK/Macmillan Publishers Limited

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