Respiratory Attacks, the Weather, and the Environment

In general, people operate as if we are at the mercy of weather and environmental factors; that these factors have little if any consequential impact on our health, wellness, and comfort; and, that we don’t have the capacity to prevent the negative health outcomes associated with their causal effects.  This is not true, but we’ve been trained to accept the environment that operates around us, not be prepared for the unintended consequences of the weather, the environment, and our surroundings. 

The health conditions that are clearly impacted by weather and environmental exposures, in the greatest preponderance, and create the greatest burden are respiratory conditions; including allergies, asthma, and COPD.  The weather and the environment can trigger flare-ups which often lead to negative health outcomes for respiratory patients.  People with respiratory issues are confronting breathing difficulties daily and without proper attention these exacerbations often lead to negative health outcomes in the form of emergent care visits, inpatient hospital stays, and even, in some cases, death. 

90% of children and 60% of adults with asthma have allergies.  60% of those do not know their specific allergies, and if a pollen allergy is known, very often it is not known which predominant pollen type is the allergen that triggers their allergies.  It’s natural for us to presume that only air quality and pollen are the determinants in our environment that impact respiratory patients, but, in fact, other weather conditions worsen the risk of breathing difficulties for them. 

When, where, under what conditions, and how often do flare-ups occur?  Well, when it comes to the impacts of weather and environmental exposures, “we don’t know, what we don’t know.”  With the advent of big data, AI, mobile technology and wearable sensors, answering questions with empirical evidence of the when, where and under what conditions respiratory patients have flare-ups is within reach.Authored by Eric Klos, the Innovator of DailyBreath, a ‘Waze-like’ Respiratory Health App that Helps People Better Manage Their Triggers.  After 25 years in Health IT Eric was inspired to focus on environmental factors as a determinant of health often neglected by the medical community. With DailyBreath, people with allergies, asthma, COPD, colds/flu, and viruses – like COVID-19 – can be weather informed, location aware, and health prepared.  If you suffer from allergies or asthma, or are a caregiver of one who does, please TEXT ‘dbnow’ to 41411 to download DailyBreath from the Apple iTunes App store.

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