A wet cough for four weeks means it's time to get it checked out
- Written by Pamela Laird, Senior Respiratory Physiotherapsit & Researcher, Telethon Kids Institute
As respiratory clinicians, we have been conducting outreach clinics to the Kimberley, in northern Western Australia, for about ten years, treating children with bronchiectasis, a chronic lung disease in which the breathing tubes in the lungs are damaged.
If left untreated, bronchiectasis can eat away at the lungs and cause devastating long-term effects.
Our research, published today in the journal Respirology, shows how Aboriginal health providers, visiting clinicians, and Aboriginal families can work together to detect illness that may lead to bronchiectasis as symptoms first appear, using local language, stories, and resources.
These resources, including an animated video, highlight that chronic wet cough, in the absence of any other symptom or sign, can be the earliest and often only warning sign of lung disease.
Let’s kick this wet cough.Why early detection is key
A persistent, low-grade wet cough is often a sign of mucus in the airway that has become infected. Over time, this mucus begins to destroy the lung tissue.


Authors: Pamela Laird, Senior Respiratory Physiotherapsit & Researcher, Telethon Kids Institute
Read more http://theconversation.com/a-wet-cough-for-four-weeks-means-its-time-to-get-it-checked-out-118828