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Diseases 101

Asthma Statistics

  • Approximately 20 million Americans have asthma. 1
  • Nine million U.S. children under 18 have been diagnosed with asthma. 2
  • More than four million children have had an asthma attack in the previous year. 2
  • More than 70% of people with asthma also suffer from allergies. 3
  • 10 million Americans suffer specifically from allergic asthma. 4
  • The prevalence of asthma increased 75% from 1980-1994. 5
  • Asthma rates in children under the age of five have increased more than 160% from 1980-1994. 5
  • In 2003, there were 12.7 million physician office visits and 1.2 million outpatient department visits due to asthma. 1
  • There were 1.9 million asthma-related visits to emergency departments in 2002. 1
  • There are approximately 5,000 deaths from asthma annually. 1
  • Direct health care costs for asthma in the United States total more than $11.5 billion annually; indirect costs (lost productivity) add another $4.6 billion for a total of $16.1 billion. Prescription drugs represented the largest single direct medical expenditure, over $5 billion. 1
  • 12.8 million school days are missed annually due to asthma. 1
  • The value of reduced productivity due to death represented the largest single indirect cost related to asthma, approaching $1.7 billion. 1
  • Asthma accounts for approximately 24.5 million missed work days for adults annually. 1
  • Asthma prevalence is 39% higher in African Americans than in whites. 1
  • The prevalence of asthma in adult females was 35% greater than the rate in males, in 2003. 1
  • Approximately 40% of children who have asthmatic parents will develop asthma. 6
  1. American Lung Association. Epidemiology & statistics Unit, Research and Program Services. Trends in Asthma Morbidity and Mortality May 2005.
  2. Summary Health Statistics for U.S. Children: National Health Interview Survey, 2002. Series 10, Number 221.2004-1549
  3. National Library of Medicine. Understanding Allergy and Asthma. National Institutes of Health.
  4. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease. Fact Sheet #9: Asthma and its Environmental Triggers: Scientists Take a Practical New Look at a Familiar Illness. www.niehs.nih.gov/oc/factsheets/asthma.htm
  5. Centers for Disease Control. Surveillance for Asthma - United States, 1960-1995, MMWR. 1998; 47 (SS-1).
  6. Martinez FD, Wright AL, Taussig LM, et al.: Asthma and wheezing in the first six years of life," N Engl J Med 1995; 332:133-138.

Allergy statistics

  • Estimates from a skin test survey suggest that allergies affect as many as 40 to 50 million people in the United States.1
  • Allergic diseases affect more than 20% of the U.S. population.3
  • Allergic diseases are the sixth leading cause of chronic disease in the United States.1
  • At least 35.9 million people in the United States have seasonal allergic rhinitis (hay fever).3
  • Approximately 14.1 million physician office visits each year are attributed to allergic rhinitis. 4
  • Immunotherapy is ultimately successful in up to 90% of patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis and in 70 to 80% with perennial allergic rhinitis.5
  • The estimated overall costs of allergic rhinitis in the United States in 1996 totaled $6 billion.6
  • It is estimated that in 1998, increased absenteeism and reduced productivity due to allergies cost U.S. companies more than $250 million.8
  • Sinusitis develops in approximately 31 million Americans each year.9
  • Chronic sinusitis affects nearly 35 million people in the United States.10
  • People suffering from sinusitis miss an average of four days of work each year.10
  • There are more than 18 million office visits to primary care physicians resulting in a diagnosis of sinusitis annually.10
  • In 1996, overall health care expenditures attributable to sinusitis in the United States were estimated to be over $5.8 billion.7
  • There is an association between sinusitis and asthma. The incidence of sinusitis in asthmatic subjects ranges from 40 to 75%.10
  • Allergic drug reactions account for 5 to 10% of all adverse drug reactions, with skin reaction being the most common form.10
  • Penicillin is a common cause of drug allergy. Anaphylactic reactions to penicillin cause 400 deaths.11
  • Allergic dermatitis (itchy rash) is the most common skin condition in children younger than 11 years of age. The percentage of children diagnosed with it has increased from 3% in the 1960s to 10% in the 1990s.12
  • Acute urticaria (hives) is common, affecting 10 to 20 percent of the population at some time in their lives. Half of those affected continue to have symptoms for more than six months.1
  • Contact dermatitis and other eczema was diagnosed at over 8.5 million office visits to physicians and at 499,000 hospital outpatient visits.13
  • Atopic dermatitis is one of the most common skin diseases, particularly in infants and children. The estimated prevalence in the United States is 9%. The prevalence of atopic dermatitis appears to be increasing.15
  • 8% of children younger than six years experience food intolerances. Of this group, 2 to 4% appear to have allergic reactions to food. In adults, an estimated 1 to 2% are sensitive to food or food additives.16
  • Peanut and/or tree nut (e.g. walnut, almond and cashew) allergy affects about three million Americans, or 1.1% of the population.17
  • Approximately 100 people in the United States die each year from food-related anaphylaxis.18
  • At least 40 deaths occur annually in the United States from reactions to insect stings.19 A severe allergic reaction known as anaphylaxis occurs in 0.5 to 5% of the U.S. population as a result of insect stings.20
  • Venom immunotherapy prevents systemic reactions in stinging insect-sensitive patients 97% of the time.20
  • Estimates of the prevalence of allergy to latex allergens in the general population vary widely, from less than 1% to 6%.21
  • Certain individuals, including health care workers who wear latex gloves and children with spina bifida who have had multiple surgical procedures, are at particularly high risk for allergic reactions to latex. Atopic individuals (those with allergies) are at an increased risk of developing latex allergy.12
  • Approximately 220 cases of anaphylaxis and 3 deaths per year are due to latex allergy.22
  1. American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (AAAAI). The Allergy Report: Science Based Findings on the Diagnosis & Treatment of Allergic Disorders, 1996-2001.
  2. American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. Task Force on Allergic Disorders. Executive Summary Report. (1998).
  3. Natahn, R.A., Meltzer, E.O., Selner, J.C., Storms, W. "Prevalence of Allergic Rhinitis in the United States." Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (1997) 99:S808-14.
  4. United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Health Statistics. National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey; 2002 Summary, table 13.
  5. Fireman, P. "The Most Common Allergy: Allergic Rhinitis." The Allergy Report 1998; Discover Magazine (March 1998) S-13-14.
  6. Ray, N.F., Baraniuk, J.N., Thamer, M., et al: Healthcare expenditures for sinusitis in 1996: contributions or asthma, rhinitis and other airway disorders. J. of Allergy Clin. Immunology, 103 (3 Pt 1): 408-514, 1999.
  7. CDC. Fast Stats A-Z, Vital and Health Statistics, Series 10, no. 13, 1999. Web: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/allergies.htm
  8. Hewitt Associates LLC. The Effects of Allergies in the Workplace. 1998.
  9. "Parameters for the Diagnosis and Management of Sinusitis." J of Allergy and Clin. Immunology (1998) 102:S107-S144.
  10. CDC, Vita and Health Statistics, Current Estimates from the National Health Interview Survey, 1994 (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, National Center for Health Statistics): DHHS Pub. No. PHS 96-1521, December 1995.
  11. Neugut AL, Ghatak AT and Miller RL. "Anaphylaxis in the United States: An investigation into its epidemiology." Archives of Internal Medicine 61 (1): 15-21. 2001.
  12. Horan, R.F., Schneider, L.C., Sheffer, A.L. "Allergic Disorders and Mastocytosis." Journal of the American Medical Association. (1992) 268:2858-2868.
  13. United States. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Health Statistics. Vital and Health Statistics Series 13, No. 143. 1997.
  14. Rudikoff D and Lebwohl M. "Atopic dermatitis." Lancet 351(9117):1715-21. 1998.
  15. Boguniewicz M and Leung D. In Allergy, Principles and Practice, 5th Ed., E. Middleton et al, ed. Mosby, St. Louis, p. 1123. 1998.
  16. Sampson HA. In Allergy, Principles and Practice, 5th Ed., E. Middleton et al, ed. Mosby, St. Louis, p. 1162. 1998.
  17. Sicherer, S., Munoz-Furlong, A., Wesley Burks, A., Sampson, H. "Prevalence of Peanut and Tree Nut Allergy in the United States Determined by a Random Digit Dial Telephone Survey." J of Allergy and Clin. Immunology (1999) 103:559-62.
  18. "Anaphylaxis in Schools and Other Childcare Settings." J of Allergy and Clin. Immunology. (1998) 102:173-76.
  19. "Stinging Insect Hypersensitivity: A Practice Parameter." J of Allergy and Clin. Immunology (1999) 103:963-980.
  20. Valentine, M.D. "Anaphylaxis and Stinging Insect Hypersensitivity." Journal of the American Medical Association. (1992) 268:2830-2833.
  21. Poley GE and Slater JE. "Latex allergy." Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 105 (6): 1054-62. 2000.
  22. Sussman GL and Beezhold DH. "Allergy to latex rubber." Annals of Internal Medicine 122 (1): 43-6. 1995.

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