Dee
Dee, age 52, was diagnosed with asthma at age 23, soon after giving birth to one of her sons. She is white European and has four children. She works as an office administrator in the financial sector. Dee has learned to manage the condition successfully. She describes herself as an organised asthmatic’ as she feels that there are steps you can take to help to make things easier – to take the preventative medication even when you’re feeling well, ensure that you keep your medication up to date, are aware of what medication you are taking, and that other people know what to do in case of an emergency.
Dee was diagnosed with asthma 23 years ago not long after giving birth to her son. After the birth she experienced post-partum hypothyroidism and there was an episode where she experienced breathing difficulties. She was admitted to hospital and was diagnosed with asthma. She was prescribed both preventative and reliever inhalers, and because she felt fearful of having another serious attack she says she made it her business to get it under control’. Dee had one further serious episode where she was hospitalised and treated with nebulisers and prednisolone, and since then she has managed her symptoms successfully. She goes for regular checks at the asthma clinic because she feels it’s important to be monitored and that the medical professionals get to know you so that if another attack occurred they are familiar with your history.
Dee says that the best advice she has had has been to be an organised asthmatic’ – to take the preventative medication even when you’re feeling well, ensure that you keep your medication up to date , are aware of what medication you are taking, and that other people know what to do in case of an emergency. She keeps inhalers in strategic places so that there is always one to hand in her bag, at the office and at the place where she goes to stay on holidays. She also makes sure that the people around her know what to do if she started to have an asthma attack so her children, and her work colleagues all know how to help if anything should happen.
Dee can go for long periods with no symptoms at all and says it can be easy to forget she is asthmatic. Her main triggers are smoky atmthospheres, stress and tiredness, and cold or wet weather. Having asthma does not impede her life and she makes a point of exercising regularly – using the reliever inhaler before taking part in activities such as swimming , singing, walking the dog, yoga‚., and she is mindful of the fact that engaging in exercise helps improve lung function and keeps her healthier.
If Dee begins to feel wheezy she knows that using the reliever inhaler will alleviate the problem within a short space of time, but she says if you ignore the symptoms and delay taking the medication it can be easy to start to panic, which in itself can exacerbate the symptoms.
I think I’m now sort of sensitised to it where it would, I’d pick it up at the first wheeze, the first tightness in the chest and do something about it then.’ Dee has become familiar with her peak flow readings, which she finds useful as an objective safety measure and she feels it can help you to know if it would be advisable to seek help or to take more medication.
Dee varies the dosage of her accuhaler (preventer inhaler) according to how she feels, sometimes taking only one puff of the inhaler, but other times if she feels her chest is feeling a bit tight’ she may increase the amount or number of times she uses it per day I’ve had enough chats with my practice nurse on the asthma clinic to know that they kind of, well, I think maybe it is that they’ve known me long enough, they sort of trust me to make that judgment now and I trust myself to make that judgment now. She finds that having built a good relationship with the asthma nurse provides her with reassurance and a safety net’ if she feels she needs it. So that although she manages her condition herself, she is not alone with it.