Asthma sufferers who also live with anxiety or depression are more prone to asthma attacks, a visiting expert says.
Dr Peter Gibson, a respiratory specialist at John Hunter Hospital in Newcastle, New South Wales, has been studying the "psycho-social factors" surrounding the illness.
"What it refers to is 'do you feel you're in control or have the skills and the confidence to manage your illness? Or is the illness managing you?'"
He and other researchers have found there were important relationships between the perceived control of asthma and other outcomes, such as quality of life. The less control people felt they had, the more prone they were to attacks.
This phenomenon had been seen in people suffering anxiety and depression, Dr Gibson said.