Nicola
Nicola, age 24, was diagnosed with asthma at age 7. She is white British, and lives with other young professionals. She studied journalism and public relations and now works for a PR consultancy. Nicola has moderate asthma and needs to take her inhaler everyday to keep her symptoms under control. In her experience most people know about asthma.
Nicola first became aware of being asthmatic when she was about seven years old. She had a mild form of asthma and was given an inhaler that she remembers using once every three or so months. Initially she felt breathless when running and doing exercise but it didn’t really bother her that much. It was only later, when she was already at secondary school, that her asthma symptoms began to trouble her and she was prescribed a Becotide inhaler to use twice a day.
Nicola does not get many asthma attacks now, but is prone to develop bronchitis which can last for up to a week. She says that actually, with bronchitis, you are wheezing all the time and it is like having a permanent asthma attack. So it can be a scary experience, particularly if you don’t feel your symptoms are responding to the treatment. She usually gets a course of antibiotics and that clears her bronchitis but for at least the first two days she needs to stay in bed as she feels very uncomfortable and tired.
In her experience asthma has not affected any aspect of her life. She has found that most people know about it because it is a common condition and providing she carries her inhaler with her, she is unlikely to need any help from others. Likewise, she is able to take part in any physical activity provided she uses her inhaler before starting to exercise. On average she tries to go to the gym twice a week.
Recently and for the first time Nicola has seen an asthma nurse and found it most useful. It provided an opportunity to discuss her asthma and treatment in detail. Nicola found out that her asthma wasn’t as well controlled as she had thought and she needed to change the type of her preventative inhaler to improve the control of her symptoms.