The use of a European telemedicine system to examine the effects of pollutants and allergens on asthmatic respiratory health

2004 
Abstract The experience of using a telemedicine feasibility study to integrate respiratory health response and environmental stimuli information is presented. The effects of ambient air quality, pollen and local environment conditions on asthmatic patients' lung function were investigated through the use of a novel European health telematic system. The Medical Diagnosis, Communication and Analysis Throughout Europe (MEDICATE) project developed and tested the feasibility of using a telemedicine system for chronic asthmatics in London, UK, and Barcelona, Spain. The key to this was the determination of the real time health (lung function) response to the ambient environment and allergens. Air quality, pollen and environmental lifestyle information were related to respiratory measurements for recruited asthmatic patients in the study through the design of a dedicated environmental management system (EMS) database. In total, 28 patients completed the study trial, subject to ambulatory monitoring of spirometric lung function (PEF, FEV 1 and FVC) up to four times a day over a 2-week period recorded during the year 2000. Alongside this, ambient air quality and pollen counts were used to represent local exposure to potential environmental stimuli. Personal questionnaire interviewing collected additional data about patient lifestyles, social-economic conditions and quality of life perceptions. The methods and indicative results of integrating environmental and health data in this respect are examined. Assessment tools such as GIS and object-orientated databases were designed to locate and compile environmental information about the patients' locations and lifestyles in the study areas (London and Barcelona). Socioeconomic and lifestyle factors, such as exposure to smoking, pets, personal journey lengths and modes, income, household occupancy and domestic fuel use, were found to have limited detectable effects on the patients' basic lung function levels. Patients' gender, age and predicted PEFR were significantly associated with the 2-week mean and minimum respiratory measurements. Lung function data were compared with air quality and pollen indicators to examine relationships on a daily or lagged-day basis controlling for confounding factors. The paper discusses the new methodology and the practicalities of using the telemedical system as a tool for assessing the impacts of environmental stimuli on respiratory health.
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