Epidemiology of asthma

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Asthma prevalence

As of 2011, approximately 235 million people worldwide were affected by asthma,[1] and roughly 250,000 people die per year from asthma-related causes.[2] Low and middle income countries make up more than 80% of the mortality.[3] Prevalences vary between countries from 1% to 18%.[2] Asthma tends to be more prevalent in developed than in developing countries.[2] Rates are lower in Asia, Eastern Europe, and Africa.[4] Within developed countries it is more common among those who are economically disadvantaged, but in contrast in developing countries it is more common amongst the affluent.[2][5] The reason for these differences is not well known.[2]

While asthma is twice as common in boys as in girls,[2] severe asthma occurs at equal rates.[6] Among adults, however, asthma is twice as common in women as in men.[6][7]

The prevalence of childhood asthma in the United States has increased since 1980, especially in younger children.

Rates of asthma have increased significantly between the 1960s and 2008 [8][9] with it being recognized as a major public health problem since the 1970s.[4] Some 9% of US children had asthma in 2001, compared with just 3.6% in 1980. The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that some 10% of the Swiss population have asthma as of 2007, compared with 2% some 25–30 years ago.[10] In the United States the age-adjusted prevalence of asthma increased from 7.3 to 8.2 percent during the years 2001 through 2009.[11]

Region specific data

Social determinants

Notes

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