Asthma Control Test Calculator

Assess asthma control using the validated ACT questionnaire for adults and children.

Asthma Control Test

AdultChild

For patients 12 years and older. Answer based on the past 4 weeks.

1. In the past 4 weeks, how much of the time did your asthma keep you from getting as much done at work, school, or at home?

2. During the past 4 weeks, how often have you had shortness of breath?

3. During the past 4 weeks, how often did your asthma symptoms wake you up at night or earlier than usual in the morning?

4. During the past 4 weeks, how often have you used your rescue inhaler or nebulizer medication?

5. How would you rate your asthma control during the past 4 weeks?

ACT Score

15/25

Very Poorly Controlled

60% of maximum score

Activity

3/5

Symptoms

3/5

Rescue Use

3/5

Self-Rating

3/5

Interpretation

Asthma is very poorly controlled. Significant treatment changes needed. Consider specialist referral.

Recommendations

  • Review and optimize inhaler technique
  • Assess medication adherence
  • Identify and minimize trigger exposure
  • Consider step-up therapy per GINA guidelines
  • Update written asthma action plan
  • Consider short course of oral corticosteroids
  • Referral to asthma specialist recommended
  • Evaluate for comorbid conditions
  • Consider biologic therapy if severe persistent

Score Interpretation

25: Completely Controlled

20-24: Well Controlled

16-19: Not Well Controlled

≤15: Very Poorly Controlled

GINA Control Assessment

Well Controlled: Daytime symptoms ≤2x/week, no night waking, reliever needed ≤2x/week, no activity limitation

Partly Controlled: 1-2 of above criteria not met

Uncontrolled: 3-4 criteria not met, or any exacerbation

When to Seek Urgent Care

  • • Reliever not working or lasting less than 4 hours
  • • Difficulty speaking in full sentences
  • • Lips or fingernails turning blue
  • • Peak flow <50% of personal best
  • • Symptoms rapidly worsening

Disclaimer: The ACT is a self-assessment tool and does not replace clinical evaluation. Results should be discussed with your healthcare provider to guide treatment decisions. Do not change medications without medical advice.