| Literature DB >> 28138132 |
Nicholas S Hopkinson1, Noel Baxter2.
Abstract
Breathlessness is a common symptom that may have multiple causes in any one individual and causes that may change over time. Breathlessness campaigns encourage people to see their General Practitioner if they are unduly breathless. Members of the London Respiratory Network collaborated to develop a tool that would encourage a holistic approach to breathlessness, which was applicable both at the time of diagnosis and during ongoing management. This has led to the development of the aide memoire "Breathing SPACE", which encompasses five key themes-smoking, pulmonary disease, anxiety/psychosocial factors, cardiac disease, and exercise/fitness. A particular concern was to ensure that high-value interventions (smoking cessation and exercise interventions) are prioritised across the life-course and throughout the course of disease management. The approach is relevant both to well people and in those with an underling diagnosis or diagnoses. The inclusion of anxiety draws attention to the importance of mental health issues. Parity of esteem requires the physical health problems of people with mental illness to be addressed. The SPACE mnemonic also addresses the problem of underdiagnosis of heart disease in people with lung disease and vice versa, as well as the systematic undertreatment of these conditions where they do co-occur.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28138132 PMCID: PMC5434774 DOI: 10.1038/s41533-016-0006-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
The Breathing SPACE framework
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| Ask about smoking, advise to quit, offer assistance to quit. Adopt the CO4 approach[ |
| 1. The right | |
| 2. Offer routine exhaled carbon monoxide ( | |
| 3. | |
| 4. | |
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| Ask about symptoms—cough, sputum, variability, nocturnal symptoms, chest discomfort, haemoptysis |
| Investigations—rapid access to quality assured spirometry | |
| Pulse oximetry | |
| Prioritise high-value interventions—smoking cessation, pulmonary rehabilitation, flu vaccination | |
| Ensure that inhaled medications are both prescribed and used appropriately | |
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| Psychosocial factors contribute to symptoms in cardiorespiratory disease. Anxiety may present with specific features of hyperventilation/dysfunctional breathing syndrome, including paraesthesia and “air hunger” |
| Parity of esteem—address the physical health of people with mental health issues | |
| Smoking cessation interventions are effective and safe to use in people with mental health problems | |
| Peer support, e.g., BLF Breathe Easy groups | |
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| Ask about risk factors (smoking, hypertension, diabetes, ischaemic heart disease?) |
| Abnormal pulse, pulmonary crepitations, oedema, cardiac murmurs | |
| Cardiac complications of respiratory disease—pulmonary hypertension, sleep-disordered breathing | |
| Investigations—consider ECG, BNP, echocardiogram | |
| Refer patients with heart disease who feel limited by their symptoms for exercise rehabilitation | |
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| Ask about exercise level “Do you take any regular exercise?” |
| fitness | Give brief advice to increase physical activity levels[ |
| Reassure and encourage: “It’s not harmful to make yourself breathless” | |
| Refer patients with lung or heart disease who feel limited by their symptoms for exercise rehabilitation | |
| Obesity—identify this explicitly as a contributor to breathlessness | |
| Signpost opportunities to participate in exercise (e.g., Park Run, Couch to 5K). Pedometer-based interventions with a step count goal are effective[ |
Fig. 1Application of Breathing SPACE in a typical patient with COPD (a) and in a patient where the main issue is deconditioning and lifestyle(b). In a typical patient with COPD, all five of the SPACE elements may be in play with attention required to Smoking cessation, treatments directly for the Pulmonary condition (vaccination, rehabilitation, inhaled medication), Anxiety about going outside for fear of being seen to be breathless, ensuring medication for a Cardiac co-morbidity is optimised, and a need to continue to consider increase Exercise levels following pulmonary rehabilitation and behaviour change
Fig. 2The pyramid of value for COPD interventions.The pyramid of value for COPD interventions developed by the London Respiratory Network with The London School of Economics (reproduced from[22]) gives estimates of cost per quality-adjusted life year gained. LABA long-acting β2 agonist, QALY quality-adjusted life year
Breathing SPACE—challenges for commissioners of health and social care
| Invest in a population-based approach, describing aims, objectives, and criteria to evaluate the impact of a breathlessness system. Adapt and develop local provision to reduce waste and increase value: know your neighbourhood and local services (tobacco dependence, obesity and physical activity services will vary considerably in the United Kingdom and internationally). |
| 1. Define the scope of the breathlessness system. |
| 2. Define the population to be served, which may include sub-populations or segments at different levels of complexity and activation requiring different services. It may include people with complex needs, such as homeless people, who are known to many service providers, including General Practitioner, ambulance services, emergency departments, and respiratory departments, who would benefit from better care coordination to improve their breathlessness. |
| 3. Reach agreement on the aim and objectives of the services provided by the system, also considering options for disinvestment. |
| 4. For each objective, agree one or more criteria by which the performance of the service would be assessed. |
| 5. For each of the criteria, identify levels of performance that can be used as quality standards, based on the data locally available. |
| 6. Identify all the resources used in the system, thus creating a breathlessness budget, including clinical staff, equipment, diagnostic tests, hospital beds, prescribing budgets, estates, and administration. |
| 7. Identify who needs to be engaged in a clinical network that will provide collective leadership for the system and be accountable for its performance. |
| 8. Produce a breathlessness system specification, which can be used for contractual arrangements between providers and payers. |
| 9. Agree upon an evaluation framework to assess the impact of the breathlessness system. |
| Commission smoking cessation services—local authority and clinical commissioners should work together to consider where smoking cessation services will have the greatest impact on their joint outcome measures. These are extremely of high value compared with other health interventions and must be protected. |
| Nine million people still smoke in the United Kingdom—increasingly concentrated in harder to reach groups. Incorporate smoking cessation into care pathways for mental health services, people admitted to hospital, and the homeless. |
| Commission pathways for breathlessness diagnostics that can address both cardiac and respiratory causes from general practice to specialist units. The IMPRESS decision support tool provides an outline of the key decision-making processes in these clinical encounters ( |
| Systems should address the under-diagnosis and treatment of cardiac disease in people with respiratory diagnoses, and the under-diagnosis and treatment of respiratory disease in people with cardiac diagnoses |
| Ensure that palliative care services are also available for patients with breathlessness due to non-malignant conditions |
| Parity of esteem—health systems need to address physical conditions in people with mental health problems |
| Commission pulmonary rehabilitation, as this is an extremely high-value intervention compared with other health interventions. |
| Attention to breathlessness in midlife has the potential to reduce sedentarism and the accumulation of multi-morbidities. |