My daughter actually did ask the girl in her homeroom to pls spray her perfume after homeroom bcz ev. morning in homeroom it would trigger a migraine headache and luckily the girl was compassionate and complied. Of all things .. it was something strong and a older brand.
Yeah, we have that too (absolutely no perfumes aloud, since one of the teacher is deathly allergic), thank god, since I'm allergic too and it makes my asthma wayyy worse. But some kids at school still wear some.
Do you take any asthma meds to keep it under control? If not, I would suggest you make an appt. to get some.
Well, I do get a few symptoms daily, which (during mainly school hours) increases because of the spray deodorant popularity at my school. Even though my peers shouldn't have them as it is a rule (No spray deodorants for safety issues -hint hint-).
Yes you might be getting asthma again, or you could have allergy symptoms since it is your nose that is "closing up".
Defintely worth looking into though. Let us know what happens.
Well it all depends how severe your asthma is. How many times per week do you get asthma symptoms? (day and night)
I get symptoms pretty much everyday, which is only relieved by my emergency inhaler. I get night time symptoms every couple days, which again, is pretty much only relieved by my emergency inhaler.
I know a few people who wear a med ID for asthma. I personnally think it would be a good idea.
Apparently in my state (NT, Aus) I don't need a med ID for asthma, but I was with my friend at the time, so I don't think the pharmacist took me seriously enough...
I think you should talk about it to your doctor about it, asthma is not something you should ignore.
I was wondering the same thing about the medical ID. I think it would be a good idea. I was diagnosed a few months ago, and when I have an asthma attack, I cannot talk from the beginning due to severe shortness of breath, so I wouldn't be able to tell people.
Btw, I'm 16 years old.