4.5 Editorial Material

A Patient Charter for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Journal

ADVANCES IN THERAPY
Volume 38, Issue 1, Pages 11-23

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12325-020-01577-7

Keywords

Caregivers; Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; Patient advocacy; Patient care; Quality of life; Socioeconomic factors; Treatment outcome

Funding

  1. AstraZeneca

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COPD has a significant impact globally, but there are gaps in care such as underreporting exacerbations and lack of access to accurate diagnosis and specialized care. Improving awareness and implementing guidelines are essential to enhancing patient care and quality of life.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has a profound impact on people living with the disease and has a high global economic and social burden. Often, people with COPD are undiagnosed, while those diagnosed are undertreated and undereducated on different aspects of COPD care. Although there are many published evidence-based treatment guidelines from different expert groups and societies, they are frequently not adhered to, which results in significant gaps in care. In particular, 'flare-ups' (known as exacerbations of COPD), which accelerate disease progression, are often under-reported, despite guidelines recommending an escalation of maintenance treatment to prevent subsequent flare-ups. Management of COPD should be proactive to prevent worsening of symptoms and to reduce the risk of future flare-ups and premature death, rather than a secondary reaction to a worsening health status. Key to this is patient access to accurate diagnosis, effective treatment and specialist care, which can vary widely due to socioeconomic differences, geographical locations and poor guideline implementation. In addition, the stigma associated with COPD can act as a barrier, which can result in people being reluctant to access treatment or clinicians being nihilistic. As global patient advocates, we have co-developed this patient charter to set a standard of care that people living with COPD should expect, raising awareness and understanding of the causes and consequences of COPD as well as the potential to improve patient care. Patients with COPD should be empowered to live the highest quality of life possible with the least number of flare-ups. We set out six principles in line with current COPD guideline recommendations, that should be implemented by governments, healthcare providers, policymakers, lung health industry partners and patients/caregivers to drive meaningful change in COPD care.

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