Children born four months before peak flu season are more likely to develop childhood asthma compared to children born at any other time of the year, new research shows.
The study belongs to Tina Hartert of
The researchers analyzed the birth and medical records of more than 95,000
children and their mothers in
“We think this is because it puts them at high risk of getting a serious respiratory virus at a young age,” Hartert said, explaining the findings. The respiratory virus she is talking about is respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), which produces typical cold symptoms
She added that more study is needed to prove that preventing RSV could keep infants from developing asthma. “That is where we are now. We need to prove that preventing this infection prevents this lifelong chronic disease.” The easiest way to achieve this goal is to have a vaccine working on RVS but so far none exists. “It’s in the pipeline. We just don’t have one yet,” Hartert said.