There is a wide range of severity among individuals, so treatment is individualized. School personnel should be cautious in generalizing from their own personal experience with asthma which may reflect greater or lesser severity of asthma than any individual student.
Intervention for Acute Asthmatic Symtoms
All students with asthma occasionally require intervention measures for acute symptoms, regardless of whether or not their symptoms are sufficiently chronic to justify a preventative maintenance medication. It is critical that use of the initial intervention measure, a bronchodilator inhaler, never be delayed. For this reason, it is essential that all students with sufficient maturity have their bronchodilator inhaler in their possession at all times. This bronchodilator inhaler is used at the discretion of the student for acute symptoms of asthma.
The bronchodilator inhaler is also commonly used prophylactically before exercise to prevent exercise-induced asthma.
Who keeps the bronchodilator inhaler at school?
School policy restricting possession of medication by students is insufficient grounds for preventing students with sufficient maturity from retaining possession of their bronchodilator inhaler. Such policies, when enforced, delay appropriate treatment, restrict activities unnecessarily, and require that the student be identified among peers as requiring special attention. The decision regarding sufficient maturity of the student to be responsible for appropriate inhaler use is an individual one to be made by the parents in consultation with their physician. The inhalers pose no abuse potential or other danger to classmates. It therefore constitutes unreasonable interference with the student's medical care for school personnel to unilaterally restrict possession of bronchodilator inhalers by students judged by parents and physician to have sufficient maturity to use the device appropriately. While restrictions on bronchodilator inhaler possession may be necessary for the youngest students, the earlier students begin to take responsibility for their own inhaler use, the earlier they will be able to manage their asthma sufficiently to function in a fully peer-appropriate manner and thereby minimize feelings of difference from classmates. This feeling of control and self-confidence is important in the long-term management of asthma. Possession of the bronchodilator inhaler by the student also promotes earlier use that decreases the risk of requiring emergency medical care from rapidly progressive asthma, which on rare occasion can cause hypoxia, brain damage, and death.
Responsibility for care of their medical problem is also enhanced by permitting children with asthma to take their scheduled medication on their own. Discussion among parents, physician, and school personnel can determine whether school-supervised administration would improve or deter compliance.
This information is written primarily for patients.
See related Patient Textbooks about Pediatrics.
See related Patient Topics Allergy, Allergy-Pulmonary, Asthma, Asthma in Children, Child and Teen Health, Food, Nutrition and Metabolism, Immune System/AIDS, Lungs and Breathing, Pediatrics or School Health.
See related Provider Textbooks about Pediatrics.
See related Provider Topics Allergy-Pulmonary, Asthma, Asthma in Children, Child and Teen Health, Food, Nutrition and Metabolism, Immune System/AIDS, Lungs and Breathing or Pediatrics.
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