| Literature DB >> 29018527 |
Jay Suntharalingam1, Tom Wilkinson2, Joseph Annandale3, Claire Davey4, Rhea Fielding5, Daryl Freeman6, Michael Gibbons7, Maxine Hardinge8, Sabrine Hippolyte9, Vikki Knowles10, Cassandra Lee11, William MacNee12, Jacqueline Pollington13, Vandana Vora14, Trefor Watts15, Meme Wijesinghe16.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The purpose of the quality standards document is to provide healthcare professionals, commissioners, service providers and patients with a guide to standards of care that should be met for home oxygen provision in the UK, together with measurable markers of good practice. Quality statements are based on the British Thoracic Society (BTS) Guideline for Home Oxygen Use in Adults.Entities:
Keywords: Long Term Oxygen Therapy (ltot); Short Burst Oxygen Therapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 29018527 PMCID: PMC5623332 DOI: 10.1136/bmjresp-2017-000223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Respir Res ISSN: 2052-4439
Membership of the BTS Home Oxygen Quality Standard Development Group
| Name | ||
| Dr Jay Suntharalingam | Co-chair | Consultant Respiratory Physician, Bath |
| Professor Tom Wilkinson | Co-chair | Consultant Respiratory Physician, Southampton |
| Joe Annandale | ARNS representative | Respiratory Nurse Specialist, Prince Philip Hospital, Wales |
| Ms Claire Davey | ACPRC representative | Advanced Practitioner Home Oxygen Service, Mile End Hospital |
| Ms Rhea Fielding | ARTP representative | Specialist Oxygen Respiratory Physiologist, University Hospitals of Coventry and Warwickshire |
| Dr Daryl Freeman | PCRS-UK representative | General Practitioner, Norfolk |
| Dr Michael Gibbons | POSC representative | Consultant Respiratory Physician, Royal Devon and Exeter |
| Mr Christopher Gingell | Lay representative | |
| Dr Maxine Hardinge | Consultant Respiratory Physician, Oxford | |
| Dr Sabi Hippolyte | Respiratory Specialty Trainee, Royal Brompton Hospital | |
| Mrs Vikki Knowles | PCRS-UK representative | Respiratory Nurse Consultant, Guildford and Waverley CCG |
| Ms Cassie Lee | ACPRC representative | Lead Respiratory Physiotherapist, Community Cardio-Respiratory Service, Imperial College Healthcare NHS |
| Professor William McNee | Professor of Respiratory Medicine, Edinburgh | |
| Ms Jacqui Pollington | Respiratory Nurse Specialist, Mid Yorkshire Hospitals | |
| Dr Vandana Vora | APM representative | Consultant in Palliative Medicine, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals Foundation Trust |
| Mr Trefor Watts | ARTP representative | Principal Physiologist, Walsall |
| Dr Meme Wijesinghe | Consultant Respiratory Physician, Royal Cornwall Hospital |
ACPRC, Association of Chartered Physiotherapists in Respiratory Care; APM, Association of Palliative Medicine; ARNS, Association of Respiratory Nurse Specialists; ARTP, Association for Respiratory Technology and Physiology; PCRS-UK, Primary Care Respiratory Society UK.
| 1. All patients should have home oxygen assessments carried out by a home oxygen assessment service that includes appropriately trained staff and appropriate equipment. |
| 2. All patients being assessed for home oxygen should undergo a risk assessment that includes assessment of individual and household member smoking status, and other household risks of fire, trips and falls. |
| 3. All patients initiated on home oxygen should have appropriate education and written information provided by a specialist home oxygen assessment team. |
| 4. Patients with advanced stable cardiorespiratory disease who have resting saturations on air that meet the qualifying criteria should be referred for a long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) assessment. |
| 5. All patients being considered for LTOT should undergo serial blood gas assessments, by the home oxygen assessment service, when stable to confirm both the need for and tolerability of LTOT. |
| 6. Review, reassessment and withdrawal All patients started on LTOT should be followed up with blood gas assessment within 3 months of initiation of therapy; this includes those patients who are discharged home from hospital on LTOT for the first time. All patients who continue on LTOT should be monitored at least on an annual basis by a home oxygen assessment service. All patients who are identified as no longer requiring any form of home oxygen should have this withdrawn. |
| 7. Short burst oxygen therapy (SBOT) should only be offered in the context of cluster headache. SBOT should not be ordered for patients with chronic cardiorespiratory disease. |
| 8. Nocturnal oxygen therapy (NOT) Patients with optimally treated cardiac failure, who are not eligible for LTOT, should only be offered NOT if there is evidence of sleep disordered breathing causing daytime symptoms. Patients with chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure with nocturnal hypoxaemia, who are not eligible for LTOT, should only be offered NOT in conjunction with non-invasive ventilation (NIV). |
| 9. Ambulatory oxygen therapy (AOT) Patients not eligible for LTOT should only have AOT ordered to facilitate pulmonary rehabilitation or to improve mobility after appropriate formal assessment that includes an exercise test. Patients on LTOT, who are mobile outdoors, should only be offered AOT if this allows them to achieve 15 hours/day compliance with LTOT and/or improve capacity to undertake outdoors activities. |
| 10. Palliative oxygen therapy (POT) can be considered as a trial for patients with hypoxaemia (saturations <92% on air) with refractory dyspnoea due to life-limiting disease that has not responded to opioids and non-pharmacological measures. |
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| The assessment and provision of home oxygen therapy requires expert knowledge and should be implemented by staff who have been adequately trained. |
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Evidence that staff undertaking home oxygen assessments have undergone appropriate training, with evidence of ongoing CPD. Evidence that equipment used during assessments has had regular quality control checks. Proportion of staff undertaking appropriate training. Proportion of equipment that has been adequately checked. The number of staff that have demonstrated completion of appropriate training for performing home oxygen assessments with evidence of ongoing continuing professional development. The number of staff undertaking home oxygen assessments. The number of medical devices used during a home oxygen assessment that have undergone a quality control check within the last 12 months. |
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The number of medical devices used during a home oxygen assessment. | |
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Ensure that all medical devices used during an assessment (including diagnostic equipment and oxygen delivery devices) must undergo regular annual quality control checks. Ensure all staff maintain continuing professional development. Service providers should ensure that a wide range of assessment equipment is available to cater to individual needs. Healthcare professionals undertaking oxygen assessments must ensure they have undergone appropriate training and have maintained this expertise through continuing professional development. Healthcare professionals should ensure that they are able to identify equipment suitable for patients. Ensure that staff undertaking home assessments have access to, and funding for, appropriate training programmes. Ensure that equipment used during oxygen assessments has undergone regular quality control checks. Ensure processes are in place to check staff and equipment standards are met and to address training and quality issues when they are not. The service specification should reflect these quality standards. Are offered a high-quality service staffed by trained healthcare professionals using quality control checked equipment. |
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| BTS Guideline for Home Oxygen Use in Adults (2015). |
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| There is a significant risk of fire and personal injury by using oxygen while smoking (including e-cigarettes) or by using oxygen near a naked flame. |
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Evidence that all patients being assessed for home oxygen undergo a holistic risk assessment that includes assessment of smoking status and other fire and falls risks before oxygen is installed. Risk assessments should take place in the patient’s place of residence and involve two-way dialogue on lifestyle. NHS England has introduced an Initial Home Oxygen Risk Mitigation Form. The information on this form is intended to raise awareness of the potential dangers of providing home oxygen and will assist healthcare professionals to make a considered decision about the appropriateness of oxygen therapy. This form can be seen in online supplementary appendix 1. Evidence that all patients being assessed for home oxygen, and their household members, are given written information regarding the increased risk associated with smoking and the use of oxygen therapy. Evidence that patients being assessed for home oxygen who smoke are offered access to a smoking cessation service. In patients where risk assessment identifies potential safety issues, patients and carers should be assessed for understanding of the risks and given opportunities to ask questions about and discuss the risks and benefits of therapy. Any decision to proceed with installation of home oxygen in the presence of significant risks should be made after careful multidisciplinary team discussion and with full understanding of the potential implications of this decision by the patient Where risk assessments identify trip and fall safety risks, restrictions (eg, providing short tubing) that might limit a patient’s independence within their home should be avoided. Where restrictions are necessary, advice and support should be provided to mitigate these. |
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The proportion of patients undergoing assessment for home oxygen who have undergone a holistic risk assessment. The proportion of patients who continue to smoke who have received written information regarding the increased risk associated with smoking and the use of oxygen. The proportion of patients who smoke at the time of referral for home oxygen assessment who have been referred to smoking cessation services. The proportion of patients continuing to smoke who have signed a consent form acknowledging the fire hazards of home oxygen. | |
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The number of patients being assessed for home oxygen who have undergone a holistic risk assessment, including assessment of their and the rest of their household’s smoking status. All patients being assessed for home oxygen. The number of patients being assessed for home oxygen who currently smoke, or who have household members who smoke, who have been provided with written information regarding the fire hazards associated with home oxygen therapy. The number of people being assessed for home oxygen who currently smoke or who have a household member who currently smokes. The number of people being assessed for home oxygen who currently smoke who have been offered access to smoking cessation services. The number of people being assessed for home oxygen who currently smoke. | |
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Ensure systems are in place to identify high-risk patients. Ensure accessible referral pathways to smoking cessation services. Ensure written information is available regarding the risks associated with smoking and home oxygen therapy. Ensure that a risk assessment is carried out as part of a home oxygen assessment. Ensure patients who continue to smoke are advised of the increased risks when home oxygen is prescribed. Ensure that patients are referred to smoking cessation services where appropriate. Ensure that home oxygen assessment services are adequately resourced to carry out risk assessments. Ensure that smoking cessation services are adequately resourced to meet volume of referrals. May want to consider developing a local policy for the prescribing of oxygen to patients who are known smokers. Are made aware of the potential hazards associated with home oxygen. Who continue to smoke have been offered access to smoking cessation services. |
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| For example, local data collection/audit. |
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| BTS Guideline for Home Oxygen Use in Adults (2015). |
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| Home oxygen and Domestic Fires; Brendan G. Cooper, DOI: 10.1183/20734735.000815 Published 1 March 2015. |
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| Patients initiated on home oxygen without formal education are often poorly compliant with their oxygen long term. Patient education is therefore an essential component of receiving home oxygen and should be tailored to individual needs and involve learning setting goals. |
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Evidence to ensure that all patients receiving home oxygen receive education from a healthcare professional competent in the assessment and delivery of home oxygen. Evidence processes are in place to ensure all patients receiving home oxygen are provided with written information regarding their oxygen therapy. The proportion of patients receiving home oxygen who have received education and written information regarding their oxygen. The number of patients receiving home oxygen who have received formal education and been provided with written information regarding their oxygen. The number of patients receiving home oxygen. |
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Ensure sufficient time is set aside in the assessment process for patients to receive education from a healthcare professional competent in the assessment and delivery of home oxygen. Ensure written information is available that takes into account all local language and literacy issues. Ensure all patients initiated on home oxygen therapy receive education in a format that is appropriate to their needs. Ensure home oxygen assessment services are adequately resourced to provide initial and ongoing education to patients in a format that is appropriate to their needs. Should receive both verbal and written information regarding their oxygen therapy and have the option to seek ongoing help as needed. |
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| For example, local data collection/audit. |
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| BTS Guideline for Home Oxygen Use in Adults (2015). |
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| LTOT improves life expectancy in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) with chronic stable hypoxaemia. Although data are lacking, it is assumed that this holds true for other cardiorespiratory diseases, including pulmonary fibrosis, cystic fibrosis (CF), pulmonary hypertension and cardiac failure. |
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Evidence that oxygen saturation is documented at least twice a year in the primary care clinical record for all patients with very severe COPD. Evidence that patients are referred appropriately to a local home oxygen assessment service. Evidence this pathway allows the transfer of appropriate information to the home oxygen assessment team (See online Evidence that locally relevant written information is provided to patients at the time of referral to a home oxygen assessment service. The proportion of patients with very severe COPD on a primary care register with a documented oxygen saturation within the previous 6 months. The proportion of patients with very severe COPD meeting the qualifying criteria for LTOT referred to the home oxygen assessment service. The proportion of patients given written information before assessment by the home oxygen assessment service. The proportion of inappropriate referrals received by a home oxygen assessment service. The number of patients with very severe COPD on a primary care register with a documented oxygen saturation in the previous 6 months. The number of patients with very severe COPD on a primary care register. The number of patients with very severe COPD on a primary care register with stable resting oxygen saturations ≤92% referred for a home oxygen assessment within the last 6 months. The number of patients with very severe COPD on a primary care register with documented stable resting oxygen saturations ≤92% within the last 6 months. The number of patients given written information prior to their assessment by the home oxygen assessment service. The number of patients referred to the home oxygen assessment service. The number of inappropriate referrals received by a home oxygen assessment service for patients who did not meet the qualifying criteria for an LTOT assessment, for example, SpO2 well above threshold (ie, above 94%), clinical instability and treatment not optimised. The number of referrals received by a home oxygen assessment service. |
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Ensure that all health professionals involved in the management of patients with advanced cardiorespiratory disease have access to a pulse oximeter. Ensure systems are in place to make health professionals aware of the criteria for referral to the home oxygen assessment service and how to refer to this service. Ensure oxygen saturations are recorded at least 6 monthly in primary care for all patients with more advanced COPD. Ensure oxygen saturations are checked for patients with advanced cardiorespiratory disease where LTOT may be considered. Ensure oxygen saturations are measured during a period of stability when all other treatment has been optimised. Ensure all patients referred to the home oxygen assessment service are given verbal or written information prior to their assessment. Ensure that home oxygen assessment services have sufficient facilities, staff and equipment to undertake assessments for all patients appropriately referred for an LTOT assessment. |
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Are given an explanation as to why they are being referred to the home oxygen assessment service with written information to support this. | |
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| For example, local data collection/audit. |
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| BTS Guideline for Home Oxygen Use in Adults. |
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| Online |
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| Arterial oxygenation can vary with disease course and particularly at exacerbations. Therefore the date of the last exacerbation should be included in the referral for LTOT so that the assessment can be performed during a period of clinical stability (ie ≥8 weeks free from exacerbation of symptoms that require medical management). |
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Evidence that patients are stable at the point of assessment through documentation of clinical stability i.e. at least 8 weeks since last exacerbation. Evidence that all patients receiving LTOT have had an initial ABG assessment on air and on titration of oxygen. Evidence of two ABG measurements were performed at least three weeks apart. Evidence that oxygen flow rate has been appropriately increased to achieve PaO2>8kpa without worsening hypercapnia (i.e. increase in PaCO2 by >1kpa). |
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The proportion of patients who are assessed for LTOT after a documented period of clinical stability. The proportion of patients receiving LTOT who have had an ABG measurement performed. The proportion of patients with two ABG measurements performed at least three weeks apart prior to commencing LTOT. The proportion of patients who have had a reassessment of PaCO2 after titration of their oxygen flow rate has been completed. The number of patients initially assessed for LTOT during a documented period of clinical stability. The number of patients on the home oxygen assessment register assessed for LTOT. The number of patients receiving LTOT who have documented evidence of a formal baseline ABG assessment that successfully met LTOT qualifying criteria. The number of patients receiving LTOT on a home oxygen assessment service register. The number of patients who have had two ABGs performed at least 3 weeks apart prior to commencing LTOT. The number of patients on the home oxygen assessment register assessed for LTOT. The number of patients receiving LTOT who have had repeat blood gases to assess for worsening hypercapnia after completion of oxygen titration. | |
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The number of patients receiving LTOT on a home oxygen assessment register. | |
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Ensure all home oxygen assessment services have the equipment and staff with required skills to perform ABGs. Ensure duration of clinical stability is documented prior to commencing an LTOT assessment. Ensure two qualifying ABGs at least 3 weeks apart are performed prior to commencing LTOT. Ensure titration of oxygen to achieve PaO2 >8 kPa without worsening hypercapnia (>1 kPa rise). Ensure services are adequately resourced with appropriate staff and equipment to undertake high-quality home oxygen assessments. Are assessed rigorously to ensure they receive a home oxygen order appropriate to their needs. |
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| Home oxygen assessment service register of assessments and patients on LTOT. |
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| BTS Guideline for Home Oxygen Use in Adults. |
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| Online |
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| The patient’s clinical status can vary with time, and a repeat assessment that the indication for LTOT is still present and that use is appropriate and well tolerated is required. |
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Evidence that the local home oxygen assessment service reviews patients on LTOT via a face-to-face visit within 3 months of initiation. Evidence that the local home oxygen assessment service reviews patients on LTOT via a face-to-face visit annually. Evidence that patients who after reassessment no longer meet indication for LTOT have it withdrawn. Evidence that risk reassessments are completed at all reviews. The proportion of patients on LTOT who are reassessed within 3 months of initiation of LTOT. The proportion of patients on LTOT who complete a yearly follow-up assessment of LTOT. The proportion of patients who no longer meet indication for LTOT who have LTOT withdrawn. The proportion of patients who have risk reassessments completed at each review. The number of patients reassessed face to face within 3 months of initiation of LTOT. The number of patients started on LTOT. The number of patients on LTOT reassessed face-to-face annually. The number of patients on LTOT. |
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The number of patients with LTOT withdrawn after reassessment. The number of patients who no longer meet criteria at reassessment for LTOT. The number of patients who have a risk assessment updated at review. The number of patients on LTOT. | |
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It is necessary to create a robust system of identifying patients started on LTOT and timely recall for reassessment. Implementation of reporting systems to demonstrate that quality measures are being achieved. Implementation of risk assessment process and escalation process in case of failed risk assessment. Ensure all patients have an LTOT reassessment within 3 months of initiation of LTOT. Ensure LTOT is withdrawn promptly where it is no longer indicated after hospital-discharge initiation. Complete risk assessment at every reassessment and escalate where necessary. Ensure that there are appropriate resources and trained staff to follow up and reassess patients commenced on LTOT. |
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Should understand the importance of an oxygen reassessment, the appropriateness of withdrawal where indicated and the need for risk assessments and escalation where necessary. | |
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| Home oxygen assessment service register. |
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| BTS Guideline for Home Oxygen Use in Adults June 2015. |
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| Oxygen therapy should be used to treat hypoxaemia, and not simply breathlessness. |
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Evidence that patients with chronic cardiorespiratory disease do not have SBOT ordered. Patients who are hypoxaemic should be assessed for LTOT if resting stable saturation meets the qualifying criteria. Evidence that patients discharged from hospital with AECOPD are not ordered SBOT. Evidence that patients with cluster headaches have appropriate access to SBOT. The proportion of patients with chronic cardiorespiratory disease with SBOT. The proportion of patients with cluster headaches who have access to SBOT. The number of patients with chronic cardiorespiratory disease with SBOT. The number of patients with SBOT. |
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The number of patients with cluster headaches who have appropriate access to SBOT. The number of patients with SBOT for cluster headache. | |
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Ensure systems are in place to provide LTOT, NOT and AOT assessments with cardiorespiratory disease, but not SBOT. Ensure systems are in place to provide SBOT to patients with cluster headaches. Ensure all patients with chronic cardiorespiratory disease are not offered SBOT. Instead, where indicated, patients should be assessed for LTOT, NOT or AOT. Ensure all patients with cluster headache have access to SBOT. Ensure patients with chronic cardiorespiratory disease do not have access to SBOT. Facilities should be available for assessment for LTOT, NOT or AOT where indicated. Ensure patients with cluster headaches have access to SBOT. Should have appropriate assessments for LTOT, NOT and AOT, where indicated. SBOT should only be available to patients with cluster headaches. |
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| For example, local data collection/audit. |
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| BTS Guideline for Home Oxygen Use in Adults June 2015. |
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| Treatment of patients with cardiac failure who are symptomatic from sleep disordered breathing with NOT leads to a reduction in daytime sleepiness and a modest improvement in exercise capacity. |
| Some patients with chronic respiratory disease, including those with CF, neuromuscular weakness or obesity hypoventilation, are at risk of developing nocturnal hypoxaemia in the setting of chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure. These patients should not receive NOT alone as they may develop uncontrolled type 2 respiratory failure. However, they may benefit from NOT given with NIV support. | |
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Evidence that NOT is provided for patients with cardiac failure with evidence of sleep disordered breathing on a sleep study causing daytime symptoms. Evidence that NOT is only provided for respiratory patients with hypercapnic respiratory failure in conjunction with NIV. The proportion of patients with cardiac failure receiving NOT who have had a sleep study and completed an Epworth Sleepiness Scale before and after treatment. The proportion of patients with hypercapnic respiratory failure receiving NOT who are also being treated with NIV. The number of patients with cardiac failure receiving NOT who have had a sleep study and completed an Epworth Sleepiness Scale before and after treatment. The number of patients with cardiac failure receiving NOT. |
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The number of patients with chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure receiving NOT who are also being treated with NIV. The number of chronic hypercapnic respiratory patients receiving NOT. | |
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Ensure systems are in place to offer a sleep study and symptom assessment of cardiac patients before and after treatment. Ensure systems are in place to offer NOT in conjunction with NIV for respiratory patients in chronic hypercapnia respiratory failure. Ensure clinical assessment of cardiac failure patients includes assessment of symptoms of sleep disordered breathing. Ensure awareness of risks of providing NOT alone without NIV treatment in chronic hypercapnic respiratory patients. Ensure that sufficient facilities, staff and equipment are available to diagnose and to treat patients with NOT when clinically indicated. Are referred for assessment if demonstrating symptoms or signs of sleep disordered breathing or uncontrolled ventilatory failure in context of cardiac failure or chronic respiratory disease. |
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| Local data collection/audit. |
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| BTS Guidelines for Home Oxygen Use in Adults June 2015. |
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| Patients who desaturate on exercise may tolerate higher levels of activity with the use of supplemental oxygen during pulmonary rehabilitation; therefore, gains made during pulmonary rehabilitation can be increased. |
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Evidence of a formal assessment including an exercise test for patients on AOT. Evidence of compliance data for LTOT patients who are mobile outdoors achieving 15 hours per day with AOT. Evidence that compliance in patients receiving AOT but not LTOT is captured and analysed as part of ongoing assessment. The proportion of patients with AOT who have appropriate formal assessment including an exercise test. The proportion of LTOT patients who are mobile outdoors with AOT who achieve 15 hours of usage per day. The proportion of patients on which AOT compliance data are collected. |
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The number of patients on AOT only who have been formally assessed including an exercise test. The number of patients on AOT only. The number of LTOT patients with AOT who are mobile outdoors and achieving 15 hours of usage per day. The number of LTOT patients with AOT. The number patients with AOT alone with compliance data recorded and reviewed annually. The number of patients with AOT alone. | |
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Ensure systems are in place to offer formal assessments of AOT including an exercise test. Ensure systems are in place for compliance data to be accessed. Ensure formal assessment of AOT which includes an exercise test to help facilitate pulmonary rehabilitation or demonstrate improvement in mobility. Ensure utilisation of compliance data for patients on LTOT with AOT to check daily usage hours. Ensure adequate resources to enable formal assessments for AOT which include an exercise test. Ensure healthcare professionals have access to compliance data via home oxygen provider. |
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Are referred and undergo appropriate formal assessment for consideration for AOT provision including an exercise test. Should be consulted about their achievable levels of activity and about what they aspire to gain from increased activity. Where all other medical interventions have been tried, those who remain keen should undergo appropriate formal assessment for consideration of AOT, including an exercise test. | |
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| Local data collection/audit. |
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| BTS Guidelines for Home Oxygen Use in Adults June 2015. |
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| Online |
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| Dyspnoea is a subjective experience and patients with hypoxaemia do not experience a significant difference in symptoms on air versus oxygen therapy. However, POT may be considered for patients with cancer or end-stage disease with limited prognosis (limited to weeks) who are hypoxaemic and are experiencing intractable breathlessness unresponsive to opioids or non-pharmacological therapies (eg, fan therapy). |
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Evidence of appropriate assessment of patients requiring POT. Evidence of trial of opioids when not contraindicated. Evidence of trial of non-pharmacological therapies. The proportion of patients with intractable breathlessness on POT whose oxygen saturation is less than 92%. The proportion of patients on POT who are on opioids and non-pharmacological therapies. The number of patients on POT whose oxygen saturation is less than 92%. The number of patients on POT for intractable breathlessness. |
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The number of eligible patients on POT who have tried opioids and non-pharmacological therapies. The number of patients on POT for intractable breathlessness. | |
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Ensure systems are in place to disseminate guidelines in primary and secondary care. Ensure access to specialist palliative care team to help with assessment and management of intractable breathlessness. Ensure availability of oxygen practitioner to monitor appropriate and safe use of POT at home. Ensure patient is on maximum treatment for underlying disease and reversible causes have been optimally treated where possible. Ensure oxygen saturation and severity of breathlessness are recorded as part of assessment of intractable breathlessness. Ensure POT is discontinued if not providing symptomatic benefit. Ensure sufficient staff in specialist palliative care and oxygen team are available to allow timely assessment of patients requiring POT in the community as well as hospital. |
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Patients and carers are offered written information about POT on discharge from hospital. | |
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| Local data collection/audit. |
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| BTS Home Oxygen Guideline for Home Oxygen Use in Adults 2015. |
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| Online |