[Skip to Content]

Learn more about content licensing opportunities with KidsHealth here, or contact partnership@KidsHealth.org 302.651.4349

Top

(your site’s main navigation, brand elements, etc.)

Left

(desktop only)

teens

Definition: Long-Term Control Medicine

Long-Term Control Medicine

There's a reason for this medicine's name: If your doctor prescribed it for your asthma, you need to take it every day, over a long period of time, to control the condition. Long-term control medicines are sometimes also called controller or maintenance medicines.

Long-term control medicine works slowly over time to keep the airways in the lungs open and clear. It may take days or weeks for long-term control medicine to start working and keep the airways from becoming swollen and narrow. That's why people need to take it each day, even when they feel OK.

 

Right

(desktop only)

Bottom

(your site's footer navigation, copyright, etc)