Breathing School is a small library of parent-friendly pediatric pulmonology guides. Each page covers one pattern at a time, in plain language, with the safety boundaries that matter for children. Start with the cluster closest to what you observe at home.

Safety first.

The first page every parent should know is the one about emergency breathing signs. If your child has any of these, an online guide is not the right resource — in-person pediatric emergency care is.

i.
Emergency breathing signs

The signs that need urgent in-person care — described in calm parent language, no jargon.

ii.
Fast breathing

How fast is too fast at different ages — and what to look at alongside the rate.

iii.
Chest indrawing

What chest indrawing looks like, why it is a red flag, and what to do immediately.

Cough school.

Cough is the most common reason families look for a pediatric pulmonology view. Most coughs are post-viral and settle. A smaller group of patterns deserve a closer look.

iv.
Child cough at night

Post-viral, asthma-pattern, allergic, reflux and wet-cough patterns — what helps parents notice the difference.

v.
Cough more than 4 weeks

Why the four-week mark matters, and which patterns deserve a closer pediatric pulmonology look.

vi.
Recurrent cough

Cough that returns after every cold or every few weeks — possible patterns and what to track.

Wheeze and asthma school.

Wheeze can have several patterns in young children. The label matters less than the pattern, technique and response. The guides below explain each pattern in plain language.

vii.
First episode of wheeze

What a first wheeze typically means, when it is reassuring, and which features need closer review.

viii.
Recurrent wheeze in toddlers

Viral-triggered vs allergic patterns and how the right next step is chosen — without rushing labels.

ix.
Preschool wheeze vs asthma

When recurrent wheeze in young children may be early asthma, and when it is not.

x.
Asthma control

What "good control" actually looks like in pediatric asthma, and what frequent reliever use suggests.

xi.
Asthma action plan

Why a written plan changes outcomes, and how to read one safely as a parent.

xii.
Common triggers

Triggers families can track, those they cannot, and how to use a trigger map without blame.

Inhaler, spacer, nebulizer school.

Most pediatric asthma is managed with safe, low-dose, well-studied medicines — when the right device is used the right way. Technique often matters more than the prescription.

xiii.
Inhaler vs nebulizer

Why a nebulizer is not automatically "stronger" — and what actually determines lung delivery.

xiv.
Inhaler, spacer, mask

Technique matters more than the device. What a short live technique check usually changes.

xv.
Controller vs reliever

How the two kinds of inhalers do different jobs — and why mixing them up matters.

xvi.
Inhaled steroid safety

Why parents worry about inhaled steroids, what the evidence actually says, and what to watch.

xvii.
Oral steroids in asthma

When short oral-steroid courses are useful, and why long or repeated courses deserve a review.

xviii.
Montelukast

Where montelukast helps, where it does not, and why behaviour-related side effects matter.

Allergy and sleep breathing school.

Allergic rhinitis, blocked nose, mouth breathing, snoring and disturbed sleep often sit alongside cough and wheeze. Looking at the whole picture works better than treating one symptom at a time.

xix.
Allergic rhinitis

Blocked nose, sneezing, itchy eyes — and how allergic rhinitis often drives cough and asthma.

xx.
Exercise-induced symptoms

Why "do not run" is not the answer — and how to keep activity safe in a child with asthma.

Complex pediatric pulmonology school.

For families dealing with recurrent infections, chronic wet cough, or more complex pediatric lung conditions. These guides explain the patterns and the calm next steps.

xxi.
Protracted bacterial bronchitis

A common cause of chronic wet cough in children — often missed, and treatable when recognised.

xxii.
Bronchiectasis

Wet cough that keeps returning, CT diagnosis, airway clearance and protecting growing lungs.

xxiii.
Primary ciliary dyskinesia

Wet cough, sinus and ear clues that point to a ciliary-clearance problem worth investigating.

xxiv.
Cystic fibrosis

When repeated chest symptoms with growth and digestion clues suggest CF — and how it is approached.

xxv.
Aspiration & swallowing

When feeding, choking or recurrent chest symptoms point to swallowing-airway issues.

xxvi.
Mucolytics in children

When mucolytics help (and when they do not) — including chronic wet cough situations.

Parent questions.

i.Is Breathing School a course?

Not in the formal sense. It is a calm, structured collection of pediatric pulmonology guides that parents can read at their own pace — usually starting with whichever symptom worries them most.

ii.Is this content free to read?

Yes. The guides are written as transparent parent education. They do not replace a consultation, and they do not give individual dosing or diagnostic advice.

iii.Can my child's school or pediatrician use these guides?

Yes. The guides are written in plain parent language but the clinical framework is current pediatric pulmonology evidence. Schools, daycare staff and clinicians are welcome to share them, with credit to Together We Breathe.

iv.What if I want a personalised plan?

For a personalised plan, a stable video consultation is the right next step. Breathing School helps you understand what is happening — the consultation helps you decide what to do about it.

Clinical source family
How these guides are written.

Every Breathing School guide is reviewed by Dr. Antar Patel under safety-first boundaries. The frameworks below shape the clinical content. They are shared for transparency and do not imply endorsement.

→ Triage
Find the right guide

Start with the symptom you actually see at home — safety screening built in.

→ Consult
Check if consultation can help

Send the breathing story for safety and suitability review.

→ Doctor
About Dr. Antar Patel

Pediatric pulmonology and pediatric intensive care — practice focus.

→ See also
All articles

Complete library of breathing-school guides in one place.

→ See also
Common pediatric breathing myths

What parents commonly hear that is not quite right.