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International Journal of Epidemiology 2002;31:1098-1102
© International Epidemiological Association 2002


Review

Asthma and the westernization ‘package’

Jeroen Douwesa,b and Neil Pearcea

a Centre for Public Health Research, Massey University Wellington Campus, Private Box 756, Wellington, New Zealand.
b Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences (IRAS), Division of Environmental and Occupational Health, Utrecht University, The Netherlands.

Correspondence: Jeroen Douwes, Centre for Public Health Research, Massey University Wellington Campus, Private Box 756, Wellington, New Zealand.E-mail: j.douwes@massey.ac.nz

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.


    Introduction
 
Ten years ago we knew what caused asthma, and we knew how to prevent it. Asthma was an atopic disease caused by allergen exposure. The fundamental aetiological mechanism was that allergen exposure, particularly in infancy, produced atopic sensitization and continued exposure resulted in asthma through the development of eosinophilic airways inflammation, bronchial hyper-responsiveness and reversible airflow obstruction. Asthma prevalence was increasing around the world because of changes in lifestyle and domestic building design that were increasing allergen exposure. The solution was therefore clear: to prevent asthma we needed to prevent exposure to allergens.1–3

In recent years it has become increasingly evident that this picture is, at best, too simplistic.4 Bronchial responsiveness is a poor surrogate measure of clinical asthma and the current evidence is that it has lower validity than standard symptom questionnaires.5 Less than one half of asthma cases are attributableto atopy and/or eosinophilic airways inflammation,6 and (non-allergic/non-atopic) neutrophilic . . . [Full Text of this Article]


    Westernization and asthma
 

    Fetal growth and asthma
 

    The westernization ‘package’
 

    Acknowledgements
 

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