| Literature DB >> 31313272 |
Tonya A Winders1, Andrew M Wilson2,3,4, Monica J Fletcher4,5, Anthony McGuinness6, David B Price7,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although severe asthma can be life-threatening, many patients are unaware they have this condition.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31313272 PMCID: PMC6697753 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-019-00371-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.883
Terminology to be excluded from the patient-centered description
| Category | Terms |
|---|---|
| Disease descriptor | Uncontrolled Phenotype Reversibility Chronic Acute severe Lack of control A state of permanency Treatment-resistant Refractory |
| Impacts | Shakes |
| Exacerbations | Inpatient/outpatient visits |
| Treatments | Monoclonal antibodies Bronchodilator Biologics Injections Bronchial thermoplasty Leukotriene receptor antagonists Oral Color of inhaler (e.g., brown or blue inhalers) |
| Confounders | Non-adherence Confounders Compliance Diligence Harmfula |
| Clinical investigations | Spirometry |
aTaken from Pavord et al. [43] regarding patient behavior and environment. Aspects include unscheduled visits, failure to attend appointments, poor adherence, smoking, allergenic environment, denial, depression, and disorganization
Fig. 1The results of the patient survey. *Examples for unwanted changes to daily life provided in the survey include ‘are you unable to do your normal day-today activities like household chores, meet with friends, work opportunities?’ †68/105 (64.7%) patients preferred the term ‘flare-ups’
Fig. 2The final Patient Understanding Leading to Assessment for a Severe Asthma Referral (PULSAR) description of severe asthma
Fig. 3The Patient Understanding Leading to Assessment for a Severe Asthma Referral (PULSAR) checklist for patients to assess whether they might have severe asthma
| The new Patient Understanding Leading to Assessment for a Severe Asthma Referral (PULSAR) description of severe asthma could improve patient understanding of the condition and allow patients to assess whether their asthma may be severe. |
| The PULSAR description should encourage patients to visit their primary care physician, who may refer them for specialist investigations, if appropriate. |