are some asthma effects acceptable?
Health-related quality-of-life scores depend on patients’ judgments about their condition and its effect on them. Asthma is a long-term disease, and it is possible that patients may learn to accept some of its effects. We tested the hypothesis that patients come to accept some asthma effects and then discount them as being important when rating their health. We asked patients which of the asthma effects listed in the St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire were acceptable to them. This enabled us to calculate a score for effects of asthma that patients experienced, yet were acceptable to them. The comparative validity of the Current, Acceptable and Unacceptable St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire scores was examined by testing their correlations with a variety of asthma-related variables. Eighty patients participated, mean age 50 years, mean forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) 73 (SD 24)% predicted. Acceptability of St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire items was related to th