Please reference this document as follows:
From the Global Strategy for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma in Children 5 Years and Younger, Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) 2009. Available from: http://www.ginasthma.org.
Each year, the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) updates its
guidelines for treatment of asthma, the Global Strategy for
Asthma Management and Prevention, and makes it available
via the GINA Website at www.ginasthma.org. That guideline
document provides a unified text and a source document for
other GINA documents and resources. Each chapter contains,
where relevant, details and management advice for specific
age groups including children 5 years and younger, children
older than 5 years, adolescents, adults, and the elderly. Most
of the differences between these age groups relate to natural
history and co-morbidities, but there are also important differences
in the approach to diagnosis, measures for assessing
severity and monitoring control, responses to different classes
of medications, techniques for engaging with the patient and
his/her family in establishing and maintaining a treatment
plan, and the psychosocial challenges presented at different
stages of life.
In January 2008, the GINA Executive Committee convened a
panel of pediatric experts* to prepare a conceptual framework
for the diagnosis and management of asthma in children 5
years and younger. In this report, Global Strategy for Asthma
Management and Prevention in Children 5 Years and
Younger, an effort has been made to present the special challenges
that must be taken into account in managing asthma in
children during the first 5 years of life, including difficulties with
diagnosis, the efficacy and safety of drugs and drug delivery
systems, and the lack of data on new therapies. Approaches to
these issues will vary among populations in the world based
on socioeconomic conditions, genetic diversity, cultural beliefs,
and differences in health care access and delivery. Patients in
this age group are often managed by pediatricians and general
practitioners who are routinely faced with a wide variety
of issues related to childhood diseases. While this report highlights
a number of issues specific to the under-5 age group, the
reader is referred to the Global Strategy for Asthma
Management and Prevention for fuller background on asthma
pathology, pathophysiology, and medications.
Recommendations in this report are made based on the best
evidence currently available, and are intended to serve as an
initial reference point with the recognition that some recommendations
may need to be modified to adapt to the population
characteristics and health care resources present in different
clinical practice settings.
Eric Bateman, MD
Chair, GINA Executive Committee




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