World Asthma Day - 1 May 2018
30 April 2018
Asthma and Respiratory Foundation NZ marks
World Asthma Day – 1 May 2018 - with the launch of a new
online ‘Teachers’ Asthma Toolkit’, a first for New
Zealand.
1 May 2018 is World Asthma Day and is
celebrated around the world to raise the profile and
continued education of asthma. One in seven children, and
one in nine adults, have asthma in New Zealand. It’s also
estimated that 586,000 school days are lost each year due to
asthma related symptoms in children.
Asthma and Respiratory Foundation NZ are marking this year’s World Asthma Day with the launch of a revolutionary new online ‘Teachers’ Asthma Toolkit’. This is a first for New Zealand and has been developed over the past twelve months. The toolkit is designed for teachers to have all the important information about asthma in one place. The Asthma and Respiratory Foundation NZ has been working alongside ‘Cognition Education Group’ in order to launch this new online tool. The ‘Teachers’ Asthma Toolkit’ is accessed via an interactive website www.learnaboutlungs.org.nz
Letitia O’Dwyer, CEO of
Asthma and Respiratory Foundation NZ, comments: “We’re
running a big campaign this year on World Asthma Day to
really raise the profile around asthma and education.
There’s lots of activities going on, and we are extremely
proud that we have been able to launch the ‘Teachers’
Asthma Toolkit’, our new online resource, a first for New
Zealand. There just hasn’t been the right tools to help
and assist the teaching profession with the increasing
numbers of pupils with asthma. How should you respond in
school to an asthma emergency? What are the common school
triggers? What are the correct processes and procedures? How
can we teach our children about this? It’s unfair to
expect teachers to know what to do without that support and
knowledge. Now we can provide this.”
Teresa
Demetriou, Head of Education and Research at Asthma and
Respiratory Foundation NZ, who has been leading the project,
comments: “It’s great to see all the work finally come
together to create this fantastic online tool for teachers.
It’s up to us in the medical profession to provide simple,
easy to use resources that could well save lives.”
“The new toolkit launching on World Asthma Day is an online tool that is accessed via an interactive website. It’s a quick and easy way for teachers to learn all the necessary information about asthma. It includes video clips, animations, classroom resources and child friendly activities. We know it’s important as statistics show that there will be at least four children in a class of 30 students with asthma,” adds, Teresa Demetriou.
Amongst a whole host of benefits the new
‘Teachers’ Asthma Toolkit’ will cover how asthma
affects education, what asthma is, what are the common
triggers at school, how asthma is treated and what to do in
an emergency. The toolkit takes an integrated approach so it
can be used as part of a teacher learning experience about
asthma and the basis for staff meeting discussion; but can
be incorporated into the classroom if teachers desire. It
can be used across the board in pre-schools, primary and
secondary schools, although the main focus has been on
children aged 11 years and under, where asthma levels are
the highest.
As part of World Asthma Day the Asthma
and Respiratory Foundation NZ has also been running a
national awareness and fund-raising campaign, inviting
schools from across the country to take part in fun and
educational activities utilising balloons, which are a
simple and effective way to help educate about breathing.
Over 90 schools have signed up to support the campaign. In
addition, Asthma and Respiratory Foundation NZ is organising
a tour of the South Island this autumn to 80 schools with
its ‘Sailor the Puffer Fish’ asthma educational tour.
On World Asthma Day the show will be in the Nelson /
Marlborough area, before moving onto Christchurch and the
lower South Island.
The national schools campaign has attracted much interest for World Asthma Day; with the school that raises the most funds winning a visit from Erin Simpson, a well-known children’s celebrity from television shows such as Sticky TV, What Now and the Erin Simpson Show as well as winning a range of books for their school library from Scholastic.
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