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. 2022 Jul 6;21:63. doi: 10.1186/s12940-022-00871-x

Table 3.

Prevalence of daily diary-reported symptoms, medication use, and mean (SD) of peak expiratory flow in the study population (n = 37) during the three study waves

Wave 1 (1068 observations) Wave 2 (1066 observations) Wave 3 (978 observations) Total (3112 observations)
Symptoms a n (%) n (%) n (%) n (%)
  Eye irritation/rhinitis 649 (60.9%) 68 (6.4%) 368 (37.7%) 851 (27.5%)
  Dyspnea 252 (23.8%) 112 (10.6%) 215 (22.9%) 579 (19.0%)
  Dry cough 296 (27.9%) 239 (22.7%) 272 (28.9%) 807 (26.4%)
Allergy medication a 547 (51.3%) 118 (11.2%) 581 (61.9%) 1246 (40.7%)
Bronchodilating medication
  No 389 (36.5%) 474 (44.9%) 355 (37.6%) 1218 (39.7%)
  Less 46 (4.3%) 64 (6.1%) 14 (1.5%) 124 (4.0%)
  Normal 533 (50.0%) 455 (43.1%) 454 (48.1%) 1442 (47.0%)
  More 98 (9.2%) 62 (5.9%) 121 (12.8%) 281 (9.2%)
Peak expiratory flow (PEF) Mean (SD) Mean (SD) Mean (SD) Mean (SD)
  PEFmo (mL) 434 (81) 441 (90) 434 (93) 436 (88)
  PEFev (mL) 442 (85) 448 (93) 442 (97) 444 (92)

PEFmo  Peak expiratory flow measured in the morning,  PEFev  Peak expiratory flow measured in the evening

aFor eye irritation/rhinitis, dyspnea, dry cough, allergy medication, “Yes” vs. “No”. For bronchodilating medication, reporting “more than yesterday” vs. “No”, “Less”, or “Same”