Allergy Relief
Information About Allergies
Each year more than 50 million Americans suffer from allergic diseases.
Allergies are the 6 leading cause of chronic disease
in the United States, costing the health care system $18 billion annually.
Two estimates of allergy prevalence in the United States are 9
percent> and 16 percent. The prevalence
of allergic rhinitis has increased substantially over the past 15
years.
Approximately 16.7 million office visits to health care providers
each year are attributed to allergic rhinitis.
Estimates of the prevalence of allergy to latex allergens in the
general population vary widely, from less than 1 percent to 6 percent.
Certain individuals, including health care workers who wear latex
gloves and children with spina bifida who have had multiple surgical
procedures, are at particularly high risk for allergic reactions to
latex. Atopic individuals (those with allergies) are at an increased
risk of developing latex allergy.
Based on 1988 to 1993 data, 220 cases of anaphylaxis and 3 deaths
per year are due to latex allergy.
Atopic dermatitis is one of the most common skin diseases, particularly
in infants and children. The estimated prevalence in the United States
is 9 percent.The prevalence of atopic dermatitis appears
to be increasing.
Health care provider visits for contact dermatitis and other eczemas,
which include atopic dermatitis, are 7 million per year.
Chronic sinusitis is the most commonly reported chronic disease,
affecting 12.6 percent of people (approximately 38 million) in the
United States in 1996.
In 1996, estimated U.S. health care expenditures attributable to
sinusitis were more than $5.8 billion.
Experts estimate that food allergy occurs in 8 percent of children
6 years of age or under, and in 1 to 2 percent of adults.
Approximately 100 Americans, usually children, die annually from food-induced
anaphylaxis.
Peanut or tree nut allergies affect approximately 3 million Americans
and cause the most severe food-induced allergic reactions.
Allergic drug reactions account for 5 to 10 percent of all adverse
drug reactions, with skin reaction being the most common form.
Penicillin is a common cause of drug allergy. One clinic found
2.5 percent of their study group reacted to penicillin allergy skin
tests (IgE antibodies). Anaphylactic reactions to penicillin
cause 400 deaths annually among Americans, making penicillin allergy
a more common cause of death than food allergy.
Acute urticaria (hives) is common, affecting 10 to 20 percent of
the population at some time in their lives. Half of those affected
continue to have symptoms for more than 6 months.
Allergy to venom of stinging insects (honeybees, wasps, hornets,
yellow jackets, and fire ants) is relatively common, with prevalence
of systemic reactions in American adults of 3.3 percent.
Between 40 and 100 Americans have been reported to die annually from
anaphylaxis to insects, although this number may be markedly underestimated.
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