Rotorua Daily Post

Living with asthma ‘frightenin­g’ ordeal for mother of four

Call for holistic approach to condition that flares in winter

- Maryana Garcia

For Tere Piua, breathing is anything but easy. The busy mother of four, whaea wha¯ngai (foster mother) of two and grandmothe­r of three already juggles looking after her large family, managing a child care service in Murupara and leadership responsibi­lities in the Cook Islands community.

Due to her chronic asthma, she also has to worry about each breath she takes.

Piua hoped sharing her experience­s with asthma would help change common public perception­s of people with the condition.

“They believe that you’re a smoker, you’re a drinker,” Piua said.

“The first question I get asked is if I smoke. That really annoys me.

“I’ve never smoked in my entire life.”

According to informatio­n from Asthma and Respirator­y Foundation NZ, people with asthma have sensitive airways in their lungs.

The airways may tighten, partially close up, swell inside, and make more mucus when faced with certain triggers.

This makes it hard to breathe in, and even harder to breathe out. There is no cure.

For Piua and her children, asthma attacks have been “uncomforta­ble, unbearable and frightenin­g”.

“It feels like someone is stomping on your chest and squeezing your lungs.

“When I know that I’m going into an attack, I crouch in like I’m going into a fetal position.”

Piua said having asthma meant worrying about “everyday things people take for granted”.

“I’m very worried about the cold, changes in weather, changes in pollen.

“All of it affects my breathing. I live with this 24 hours a day.”

According to the Asthma and Respirator­y Foundation NZ’S most recent impact report, Pacific peoples are 3.2 times and Ma¯ ori are almost three times more likely to be hospitalis­ed because of asthma than Pa¯keha¯ or other New Zealanders.

Asthma mortality rates are more than three times higher for Ma¯ori and 2.7 times higher for Pacific peoples.

An article by Medical Research Institute of New Zealand professor Richard Beasley stated that these rates, particular­ly in Ma¯ori and Pacific adults, were among the highest in the world.

The statistics did not come as a surprise to Piua, whose family all suffer from serious forms of asthma, allergies, eczema and hay fever.

“I’ve been to hospital quite a few times,” Piua said.

“The attacks always come just on the brink of winter. Right now, just talking to you I’m out of breath.”

Piua said she and many of the children in her family had been prescribed “the whole traffic light” of asthma medication.

“Sometimes we fight over the ventolin [quick relief medication].

“My son’s an athlete but he runs out of breath and he can’t find his inhaler so he uses mine.”

Piua believed asthma treatment could benefit from natural and culturally sensitive approaches which focused on the whole person.

“If we look back to our tupuna, before we had asthma pumps, our health back then was very good.

“We were eating off the land. There were no poisons, no fizzy drink. It was all healthy.

“If it worked back then in our ancestors’ days then we should be embracing that.”

Piua’s focus in her family is on healthy and clean eating, exercise and spiritual nourishmen­t.

“I also try to make sure everyone

remembers their medication­s.”

Asthma and Respirator­y Foundation NZ medical adviser Dr James Fingleton said Asthma Awareness Month was an opportunit­y to call for investment and change.

“Historic and institutio­nal racism has affected the way services are delivered and also [patients’] willingnes­s and ability to access support.”

Fingleton also said financial difficulti­es could lead to people living in damp and mouldy homes and not being able to afford medical appointmen­ts and prescripti­ons.

The situation would not change, Fingleton said, without significan­t investment and focus.

“[We need] general investment in building a good severe asthma network across the country because one does not currently exist.

“That should be paired with culturally appropriat­e services embedded in communitie­s with higher respirator­y needs.”

A Ministry of Health

PHOTOS/SUPPLIED

Tere Piua (left), with Ina Puia, says asthma treatment could benefit from natural and culturally sensitive approaches which focus on the whole person.

"The first question I get asked is if I smoke. That really annoys me. I’ve never smoked in my entire life"

Tere Piua

spokespers­on said the ministry recognised asthma could have a severe impact on the quality of life of many New Zealanders and several strategies were in place to improve the health outcomes of people with asthma.

“One key element is the Healthy Homes Initiative which aims to increase the number of wha¯nau living in warm, dry and healthy homes.

“Another important approach has been the ministry’s commitment to Smokefree Aotearoa.”

The spokespers­on said the ministry worked closely with community health providers to improve equity outcomes.

“Creating clinical health networks to manage long-term conditions like asthma will be fundamenta­l to this work and to the operationa­l structure of Health New Zealand.”

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 ?? ?? Tere Piua (second from right) says having asthma means having to worry about things many people take for granted.
Tere Piua (second from right) says having asthma means having to worry about things many people take for granted.
 ?? ?? Asthma and Respirator­y Foundation NZ medical adviser Dr James Fingleton.
Asthma and Respirator­y Foundation NZ medical adviser Dr James Fingleton.

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