Millions of people with asthma use the blue inhaler to help relieve the symptoms when they have an attack but a doctor is now warning of 'dangerous' sign ...
Many asthma patients in the UK are being encouraged to move to newer combination inhalers instead. The National Institute for ...
Why should people with blue inhalers switch? "Over a million people have been switched from using the standard blue inhaler ...
Health chiefs have issued a call to anyone using the medication to treat asthma attacks ...
Brits who puff on blue inhalers to open their airways and ease their breathing have been urged to reconsider their 'asthma action plans' as soon as.
Asthma patients using blue salbutamol inhalers have been urged to contact their GP ...
Asthma sufferers who rely on a blue inhaler to manage their condition are being urged to speak to their GP. The appeal follows updated guidelines prompted by research indicating that prolonged use of ...
Research has found that children using 6 or more blue reliever inhalers a year are 3-5 times more likely to have an asthma attack. Reliever inhalers only treat the immediate symptoms and mask the ...
In the first randomized controlled trial to investigate the use of a 2-in-1 inhaler as the sole reliever therapy for children aged 5 to 15, an international team found the combined treatment to be ...
Dr Ranj Singh appeared on BBC Morning Live to warn of overusing blue salbutamol inhalers ...
What type of asthma inhaler is right for you? In the U.S., 25 million people are affected by asthma. That’s roughly 1 in 13 adults and children. Asthma can be mild or severe. Some people with asthma ...
As reliever monotherapy for mild asthma, the inhaled corticosteroid (ICS)-formoterol combination reduced asthma attacks in children compared with a short-acting β₂-agonist (SABA), the CARE trial ...