| Literature DB >> 27435407 |
Abstract
Asthma deaths are a barometer of the quality of asthma care. The principal care for patients with severe asthma is often a joint partnership between primary and secondary services. Communication between the two services determines the effectiveness of treatment. Undertaking an audit on asthma in either primary or separately in secondary care is a relatively straightforward process. However, when the audit spans both primary and secondary care in a country as large as the United Kingdom which is further sub-divided into the separate healthcare systems of England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Island, then the audit becomes considerably more challenging. The National Review of Asthma Deaths (NRAD) reported in May 2014 was a confidential enquiry tasked with identifying circumstances surrounding asthma deaths across the whole of the UK, in order to ascertain avoidable factors and make recommendations to improve care and reduce future asthma deaths (Why asthma still kills: the National Review of Asthma Deaths (NRAD) Confidential Enquiry report, 2014, http://www.rcplondon.ac.uk/sites/default/files/why-asthma-still-kills-full-report.pdf ). The idea for NRAD arose from a longstanding East of England confidential enquiry started in 1988 by Dr Brian Harrison and then handed onto me in 2001 until funding for the national review of asthma deaths was secured in 2010.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27435407 PMCID: PMC4952053 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-016-0393-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Characteristics of NRAD patients who died from asthma
| Duration of asthma ( | Median 11y (0-62y) |
|---|---|
| Age at diagnosis ( | Median 37y (10 months – 90y) |
| Age at death ( | Median 58 yrs (range 4 – 97 yrs) |
| Severity of asthma ( | Mild 9 %- |
| Moderate- 49 % | |
| Severe- 39 % | |
| Previous asthma hospital admissions | Hospital ever 47 % |
| Intensive care ever 15 % | |
| Ventilation ever 7 % | |
| Asthma triggers | Recorded in 49 % |
| History of Allergy | Recorded in 41 % |
| Evidence of eosinophilia | Recorded in 15 % |
Fig. 1Location of death
Recommendations to reduce risk of asthma death
| Risk Factor | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| 1. 45 % died at home without calling for help and Personal Asthma Action Plans (PAAPs) had only been issued to 23 % | All patients with asthma to be issued with PAAPs to include |
| • asthma triggers, | |
| • current therapy, | |
| • advice on treatment escalation and | |
| • how to call for help | |
| 2. Failure to phenotype asthma or identify triggers in >51 % | Asthma clinical phenotyping to identify likely triggers and underlying mechanism of asthma |
| 3. No evidence of a review in general practice in the last yr for 43 % | Structured annual review of asthma control preferably timed a month before expected seasonal exacerbation |
| 4. 10 % died within 28d of hospital discharge and 21 % died within 12mo of attendance in ED | Follow-up arranged following every attendance in ED and secondary care follow-up after each hospital admission for asthma |
| 5. Excessive prescribing of SABA (39 % issued with >12 devices in previous 12mo) inadequate uptake of ICS with 38 % issued <4 devices in previous 12 mo | Electronic surveillance of inhaler prescribing in primary care to identify those prescribed >12 short-acting beta-agonist or < 4 corticosteroid inhaler devices in previous yr |
Risk factors for asthma death identified from NRAD
| Risk Factor |
|---|
| Lack of appropriate action by health care professional or patient during asthma exacerbation |
| Excess prescriptions of reliever medication (>12 Short acting beta-agonist bronchodilator devices in previous 12 months) |
| Poor adherence with inhaled corticosteroids (<4 in previous 12 months) |
| Use of long acting beta-agonist bronchodilators without Inhaled corticosteroids |
| Hospital admission for asthma in the month before death |
| Two or more attendances at A&E (ED) in year before death |
| Failure to phenotype asthma or identify triggers for asthma attacks |
| Asthma diagnosed in adulthood |