| Literature DB >> 28729620 |
Ainee Khan1, Andrew P Dickens2, Peymane Adab3, Rachel E Jordan3.
Abstract
Self-management support for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients is recommended by UK national guidelines, but extent of implementation is unknown. We aimed to describe self-management behaviour and support among COPD patients and explore behaviour associated with having a self-management plan. We undertook cross-sectional analysis of self-reported data from diagnosed COPD patients in the Birmingham COPD Cohort study. Questionnaire items relevant to self-management behaviour, knowledge of COPD, receipt of self-management plans and advice from healthcare professionals were examined. Multiple regression models were used to identify behaviour associated with having a self-management plan. One-thousand seventy-eight participants (676 males, 62.7%, mean age 69.8 (standard deviation 9.0) years) were included. The majority reported taking medications as instructed (940, 94.0%) and receiving annual influenza vaccinations (962, 89.2%). Only 400 (40.4%) participants had self-management plans, 538 (49.9%) reported never having received advice on diet/exercise and 110 (42.7%) current smokers had been offered practical help to stop smoking in the previous year. General knowledge about COPD was moderate (mean total Bristol COPD Knowledge Questionnaire score: 31.5 (standard deviation 10.7); max score 65), corresponding to 48.5% of questions answered correctly. Having a self-management plan was positively associated with self-reported adherence to medication (odds ratio 3.10, 95% confidence interval 1.43 to 6.72), attendance at a training course (odds ratio 2.72, 95% confidence interval 1.81 to 4.12), attendance at a support group (odds ratio 6.28, 95% confidence interval 2.96 to 13.35) and better disease knowledge (mean difference 4.87, 95% confidence interval 3.16 to 6.58). Primary care healthcare professionals should ensure more widespread implementation of individualised self-management plans for all patients and improve the lifestyle advice provided. CHRONIC LUNG DISEASE: CALL FOR WIDER IMPLEMENTATION OF SELF-MANAGEMENT PLANS: Health professionals should ensure all patients with chronic lung disease receive individualized self-management plans and lifestyle advice. UK national guidelines state that patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) should receive personalized self-management plans and comprehensive support to help them manage their disease. Ainee Khan and colleagues at the University of Birmingham analyzed patient questionnaire data gathered during the Birmingham COPD Cohort study to explore self-management behavior, receipt of self-management plans and advice, and patient knowledge of COPD. Of 1,078 participants, only 400 had self-management plans, and less than half reported receiving lifestyle advice or support. Those with plans were more likely to adhere to medication, had greater knowledge about COPD and were more likely to attend support groups and training courses. The authors recommend carefully-planned, wider implementation of COPD self-management plans and associated support.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28729620 PMCID: PMC5519687 DOI: 10.1038/s41533-017-0046-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
Fig. 1Flow of participants from cohort to sample
Baseline characteristics: all those eligible for analysis in cohort and respondents to 6-month questionnaire
| Characteristic | All those diagnosed with COPD ( | Diagnosed with COPD and responded to 6-month questionnaire ( |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| |
| Age (years) | ||
| Mean (SD) | 69.2 (9.4) | 69.8 (9.0) |
| Sex | ||
| Male | 952 (61.5%) | 676 (62.7%) |
| Female | 595 (38.5%) | 402 (37.3%) |
| Smoking status | ||
| Current-smoker | 402 (26.6%) | 258 (24.3%) |
| Former-smoker | 867 (57.4%) | 653 (61.5%) |
| Never-smoker | 242 (16.0%) | 151 (14.2%) |
| Body mass index | ||
| Underweight < 18.5 | 33 (2.1%) | 23 (2.1%) |
| Normal 18.5–25 | 387 (25.0%) | 269 (25.0%) |
| Overweight 25–30 | 566 (36.6%) | 403 (37.4%) |
| Obese > 30 | 561 (36.3%) | 383 (35.5%) |
| Ethnicity | ||
| White | 1377 (97.0%) | 997 (97.6%) |
| Any other | 43 (3.0%) | 25 (2.4%) |
| Education | ||
| No formal qualification | 838 (61.2%) | 597 (60.4%) |
| GCSE/A-level | 288 (21.0%) | 202 (20.4%) |
| Degree | 93 (6.8%) | 74 (7.5%) |
| Other qualification | 150 (11.0%) | 115 (11.6%) |
| Employment status | ||
| Paid/self-employed | 245 (16.0%) | 154 (14.4%) |
| Not working | 1286 (84.0%) | 919 (85.6%) |
| Marital status | ||
| Married/civil partner | 805 (60.2%) | 605 (62.1%) |
| Never married/civil partner | 101 (7.6%) | 72 (7.4%) |
| Widowed | 230 (17.2%) | 166 (17.0%) |
| Divorced | 177 (13.2%) | 116 (11.9%) |
| Separated | 24 (1.8%) | 16 (1.6%) |
| GOLD stagea | ||
| FEV1/FVC ≥ 0.7 | 200 (13.7%) | 128 (12.3%) |
| 1 (FEV1 ≥ 80% predicted) | 308 (21.1%) | 225 (21.6%) |
| 2 (50% ≤ FEV1 < 80% predicted) | 652 (44.7%) | 476 (45.8%) |
| 3 (30% ≤ FEV1 < 50% predicted) | 253 (17.4%) | 179 (17.2%) |
| 4 (FEV1 < 30% predicted) | 45 (3.1%) | 32 (3.1%) |
| Self-reported | ||
| Co-morbidities at baseline | ||
| Cancer | 183 (12.3%) | 134 (12.7%) |
| Diabetes | 227 (15.2%) | 151 (14.3%) |
| Hypertension | 669 (44.8%) | 481 (45.4%) |
| Coronary heart disease | 226 (15.1%) | 159 (15.0%) |
| Heart failure | 110 (7.4%) | 75 (7.1%) |
| Asthma | 611 (40.9%) | 408 (38.5%) |
| Depression | 278 (18.6%) | 174 (16.4%) |
| MRC dyspnoea | ||
| Grade 1–2 | 549 (38.1) | 391 (37.1) |
| Grade 3–5 | 893 (61.9) | 662 (62.9) |
| CAT | ||
| Score; mean (SD) | 20.0 (8.8) | 19.3 (8.6) |
| Living situation | ||
| Alone | 418 (29.0%) | 302 (29.1%) |
| Not alone | 1021 (71.0%) | 736 (70.9 %) |
NB: Where numbers do not add up to full cohort, values are missing. Percentages refer to the data available
a GOLD classification severity based on airflow limitation post-bronchodilator (FEV1 forced expiratory volume during the first second) based on the European Community of Coal and Steel (ECCS) equations, SD standard deviation, CAT COPD Assessment Test, GOLD Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease, GCSE General Certificate of Secondary Education
Self-management behaviours: adherence to medication and lifestyles
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Adherence to medication | |
| Taking inhalers or medicines exactly as instructed by health professional; | |
| Yes | 940 (94.0%) |
| No | 60 (6.0 %) |
| Smoking habit at 6-months; | |
| No change since baseline | 743 (85.5%) |
| Current smoking | 193 (22.2%) |
| Former smoker | 450 (51.8%) |
| Never smoker | 100 (11.5%) |
| Change since baseline | 126 (14.5%) |
| Quit smoking | 105 (12.1%) |
| Started/resumed smoking | 21 (2.4%) |
| Influenza vaccination usually received | |
| Total; | 962 (89.2%) |
| Those under 65 years old; | 297 |
| Receiving annual vaccination; | 258 (86.9%) |
| Those over 65 years old; | 781 |
| Receiving annual vaccination; | 704 (90.1%) |
| Self-reported exercise in the last 7 days | |
| Vigorousa exercise; | 153 (14.2%) |
| Moderateb exercise; | 213 (19.8%) |
| Walking; | 388 (36.0%) |
| Hours reported sitting; hours/day; median (IQR) | 5 [4–8] |
NB: Where numbers do not add up to full cohort, values are missing. Percentages refer to the data available
a Heavy lifting, digging, aerobics or fast bicycling
b Carrying light loads, bicycling at a regular pace or doubles tennis
Self-management behaviours: Bristol COPD Knowledge Questionnaire (BCKQ)
| Topics of BCKQa | Mean score (SD) (min = 0, max = 5) |
|---|---|
| 1 General | 2.1 (1.1) |
| Questions relating to chronicity, progression of disease over time, diagnosis, age of diagnosis and oxygen levels | |
| 2 Aetiology | 3.2 (1.4) |
| Questions relating to causes: smoking, dust, asthma, inheritance | |
| 3 Symptoms | 2.7 (1.4) |
| Questions relating to recognising common symptoms: e.g., fatigue, wheezing | |
| 4 Breathlessness | 2.3 (1.1) |
| Questions relating to breathlessness and to eating meals, oxygen levels and exercise | |
| 5 Phlegm | 2.7 (1.4) |
| Questions relating to sputum and dehydration, bronchodilators and breathing exercises | |
| 6 Infections | 2.2 (1.3) |
| Questions relating to signs of infections: sputum colour change, temperature, steroid use in exacerbation | |
| 7 Exercise | 2.9 (1.5) |
| Questions relating to benefits of exercise and fitness, bone density, depression and breathlessness | |
| 8 Smoking | 3.3 (1.0) |
| Questions relating to smoking cessation and risk of heart disease, further lung damage, lung function and NRT | |
| 9 Vaccination | 3.1 (1.0) |
| Questions relating to recommendations of annual influenza vaccination, age and protective factors | |
| 10 Inhaled bronchodilators | 1.8 (1.4) |
| Questions relating to use of bronchodilators, spacer devices and side effects. | |
| 11 Antibiotics | 2.3 (1.4) |
| Questions relating to use, side effects, effectiveness of antibiotics and exacerbations | |
| 12 Oral steroids | 1.5 (1.4) |
| Questions relating to steroid use, infection and side effects | |
| 13 Inhaled steroids | 0.7 (1.0) |
| Questions relating to use with oral steroids, spacer devices, effectiveness and side effects | |
| Overall BCKQ score (mean (SD)) | 31.5 (10.7) |
| Distribution of BCKQ ( | |
| 0–13 | 37 (5.8%) |
| 14–26 | 150 (23.7%) |
| 27–39 | 295 (46.5%) |
| 40–52 | 144 (22.7%) |
| 53–65 | 8 (1.3%) |
NRT nicotine replacement therapy
a Each of the 13 topics contained five questions (1 point for a correct answer). Total BCKQ score is out of 65 (13 topics × 5 questions)
Self-management behaviours: exacerbation-related symptom recognition and treatments at home
| Characteristic | No exacerbation within the last 6-months ( | Exacerbation within the last 6-months ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recognition of symptoms of exacerbation (question from BCKQ) | In depth breakdown of question 6 from BCKQ | |||
| With exacerbations phlegm usually becomes coloured (yellow or green); | ||||
| Correctly answered | 436 (85.7%) | 435 (91.0%) | ||
| Incorrectly answered | 10 (1.9%) | 12 (2.5%) | ||
| Did not know | 63 (12.4%) | 31 (6.5%) | ||
| Exacerbations can occur in the absence of a chest infection; | ||||
| Correctly answered | 160 (32.3%) | 180 (38.6%) | ||
| Incorrectly answered | 53 (10.7%) | 55 (11.8%) | ||
| Did not know | 283 (57.1%) | 231 (49.6%) | ||
| Chest infections are always accompanied by a high temperature; | ||||
| Correctly answered | 100 (20.0%) | 105 (21.6%) | ||
| Incorrectly answered | 185 (37.1%) | 207 (42.6%) | ||
| Did not know | 214 (42.9%) | 152 (31.3%) | ||
| Antibiotics | Course of antibiotics at home if needed; | 91 (17.8%) | 216 (45.1%) | |
| Confidence in using at home antibioticsa; | ||||
| Very confident | 44 (48.4%) | 106 (49.1%) | ||
| Confident | 38 (41.8%) | 96 (44.4%) | ||
| Not confident | 6 (6.6%) | 9 (4.2%) | ||
| Not at all confident | 0 | 0 | ||
| Steroids | Course of steroids at home if needed; | 71 (14.1%) | 189 (40.1%) | |
| Confidence in using steroid course at homeb; | ||||
| Very confident | 36 (50.7%) | 91 (48.1%) | ||
| Confident | 29 (40.9%) | 76 (40.2%) | ||
| Not confident | 5 (7.0%) | 14 (7.4%) | ||
| Not at all confident | 0 | 4 (2.1%) | ||
| Deterioration | What to do if breathing gets worse; | |||
| Told with written instructions | 72 (14.8%) | 104 (22.0%) | ||
| Told but not written | 244 (50.0%) | 256 (54.1%) | ||
| Not told but know | 97 (19.9%) | 80 (16.9%) | ||
| Not told and do not know what to do | 75 (15.4%) | 33 (7.0%) | ||
| Emergency services | When to call ambulance if breathing worsens; | |||
| Told with written instructions | 34 (7.0%) | 53 (11.3%) | ||
| Told but not written | 99 (20.3%) | 145 (30.9%) | ||
| Not told but know | 249 (51.0%) | 196 (41.8%) | ||
| Not told and do not know what to do | 106 (21.7%) | 75 (16.0%) | ||
NB: Where numbers do not add up to full cohort, values are missing. Percentages refer to the data available
BCKQ Bristol COPD Knowledge Questionnaire
a Of those with ‘at home’ antibiotics, the confidence in use
b Of those with ‘at home’ steroids, the confidence in use
Self-management support: Plans and healthcare professional advice
| Characteristic | No exacerbation within the last 6-months ( | Exacerbation within the last 6-months ( |
|---|---|---|
| Agreed self-management plan for COPD with health professional; | ||
| Yes (within last 12-months) | 129 (25.1%) | 165 (34.6%) |
| Yes (more than 12-months ago) | 57 (11.1%) | 49 (10.3%) |
| No | 276 (53.8%) | 214 (44.9%) |
| Do not know | 51 (9.9%) | 49 (10.3%) |
| Current satisfaction with information provided about inhalers or medicines (by health professional); | ||
| Understand everything | 421 (80.2%) | 352 (80.7%) |
| Understand but would like to know more | 80 (15.2%) | 57 (13.1%) |
| Slightly confused about medicines | 15 (2.9%) | 23 (5.3%) |
| Very confused about medicines | 9 (1.7%) | 4 (0.9 %) |
| Health professional advised to give up smoking within the last 12 months; | ||
| If current-smoker at baseline | 141 (54.7%) | 149 (57.8%) |
| Health professional offered practicala help to give up smoking within last 12 months; | ||
| If current-smoker at baseline | 105 (40.7%) | 115 (44.6%) |
| Health professional advice on diet/eating; | ||
| None | 291 (56.6%) | 247 (52.1%) |
| Lose/gain weight | 73 (14.4%) | 73 (15.5%) |
| Eat healthy food | 164 (32.3%) | 162 (34.4%) |
| Eat several small meals/day | 28 (5.5%) | 57 (12.2%) |
| Health professional advice to do some physical activity; | 258 (50.2%) | 261 (55.4%) |
| Attendance at a training course on COPD (e.g., Expert Patients Programme); | ||
| Within the last 12-months | 26 (5.0%) | 50 (10.6%) |
| Yes but not within the last 12-months | 34 (6.6%) | 59 (12.5%) |
| No | 456 (88.4%) | 363 (76.9%) |
| Attendance at a support group for lung problems (e.g., Breathe easy); | ||
| Regularly | 5 (1.0%) | 26 (5.5%) |
| Occasionally | 10 (1.9%) | 24 (5.1%) |
| Never | 503 (97.1%) | 421 (89.4%) |
| Attendance at pulmonary rehabilitation; | ||
| Offered pulmonary rehabilitation in past 6 months | 19 (3.7%) | 53 (11.5%) |
| If offered, attended pulmonary rehabilitation | 13 (68.4%) | 32 (60.4%) |
NB: Where numbers do not add up to full cohort, values are missing. Percentages refer to the data available
a Practical help: e.g., NRT/smoking cessation clinic
Knowledge, behaviours and advice associated with having a self-management plan and report of recent exacerbation
| Self-management plan in placea | Exacerbation in the last 6 months | |
|---|---|---|
| Attendance at training courseb | ||
| ORc (95% CI) | 2.72 (1.81, 4.12)* | 1.73 (1.13, 2.65)* |
| Attendance at support groupd | ||
| ORc (95% CI) | 6.28 (2.96, 13.35)* | 2.47 (1.13, 5.38*)* |
| BCKQ score | ||
| Mean differencec (95% CI) | 4.87 (3.16, 6.58)* | 4.39 (2.62, 6.15)* |
| Offered NRT by healthcare professionale | ||
| ORc(95% CI) | 1.40 (0.83, 2.38) | 0.90 (0.53, 1.55) |
| Adherence to medicationsf | ||
| ORc (95% CI) | 3.10 (1.43, 6.72)* | 2.73 (1.31, 5.69)* |
| Ever advised to carry out physical activity by health professional | ||
| ORc (95% CI) | 2.44 (1.78, 3.35)* | 1.08 (0.78, 1.49) |
| CAT score | ||
| Mean differencec(95% CI) | −0.53 (−1.61, 0.56) | 2.89 (1.75, 4.02)* |
*p-value < 0.05
a Self-management/personal care plan ever agreed with a health professional, i.e., <12 months or >12 months ago
b Ever attended a training (e.g., Expert Patients Programme) course i.e., <12 months or >12 months ago
c Adjusted for age, gender, smoking status, education, MRC dyspnoea score and co-morbidities
d Ever attended a support (e.g., Breathe Easy) group i.e., regularly or occasionally
e Health professional offering help to give up smoking (e.g., NRT or a referral to a smoking cessation clinic) within last 12 months regardless of smoking status
f Adherence: trying to take inhalers or medicines exactly as instructed by a doctor or nurse