Prevalence of chronic respiratory symptoms and dyspnea and related factors in residents in China.
10.3760/cma.j.cn112338-20211102-00844
- Author:
Xiao JIANG
1
;
Shu CONG
1
;
Miao YANG
2
;
Jing FAN
1
;
Qian WANG
3
;
Ning WANG
1
;
Lin Hong WANG
1
;
Li Wen FANG
1
Author Information
1. National Center for Chronic and Non-communicable Disease Prevention and Control, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing 100050, China.
2. Nankai District Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Tianjin 300113, China.
3. National Center for Women and Children's Health, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing 100081, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Adult;
China/epidemiology*;
Cough/epidemiology*;
Dust;
Dyspnea/epidemiology*;
Humans;
Prevalence
- From:
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology
2022;43(3):315-323
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective: To understand the prevalence of chronic cough, chronic expectoration and dyspnea and related factors in residents aged ≥40 years in China, and provide basic data for the prevention and control of chronic respiratory diseases. Methods: Data were from 2014-2015 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease surveillance in China. The information about chronic respiratory symptoms were collected by face-to-face interview. The prevalence rates of chronic cough, chronic expectoration, dyspnea and chronic respiratory symptoms and their 95%CI were estimated with complex sampling weights. Results: A total of 75 082 subjects were included in the analysis. The prevalence rates of chronic cough, chronic expectoration, dyspnea and chronic respiratory symptoms in the Chinese aged ≥40 years were 3.75% (95%CI: 3.38%-4.11%), 5.83% (95%CI: 5.40%-6.26%), 2.45% (95%CI: 2.02%-2.87%) and 8.93% (95%CI: 8.25%-9.62%), respectively. The prevalence rates of chronic cough, chronic expectoration, dyspnea and chronic respiratory symptoms in patients with chronic respiratory diseases were relatively higher, which were 10.27%, 13.85%, 6.43%, 20.72% respectively. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that age, region, education level, occupation, BMI, family history of respiratory diseases, history of severe respiratory infections in childhood, exposure to dust or chemicals in workplace and smoking status affected the prevalence of chronic cough, chronic expectoration and dyspnea. The prevalence of the three types of chronic respiratory symptoms increased significantly with age, which were higher in western region, smokers and underweight/obese subjects. The three prevalence rates mentioned above were higher in those with a history of severe respiratory infection in childhood, those exposed to biomass fuel in household, and those exposed to dust or chemicals in workplace. Conclusions: The prevalence rate of chronic respiratory symptoms was high in residents aged ≥40 years in China. Many factors affected the prevalence of chronic respiratory symptoms. Comprehensive prevention and control measures targeting risk factors should be taken to reduce the burden of chronic respiratory diseases.