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Original Research

“Breathing New Life Into Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)” – Results From An Online Survey Of UK Patients

, & ORCID Icon
Pages 2799-2807 | Published online: 04 Dec 2019
 

Abstract

Background

There is a lack of data on the impact of COPD on individuals, their illness, behavior and attitude to the disease.

Method

500 UK patients with a primary care diagnosis of COPD responded to an online survey.

Results

61.2% of respondents were female and 85.8% were between 50 and 80 years old. Two-thirds (67.8%) of respondents did not smoke at the time of the survey. Almost half of those surveyed (46.2%, n=231) used three inhalers, and 31% (n=155) agreed or strongly agreed with the statement “I feel that my treatment is not adequately controlling my condition”, while 39.4% (n=197) disagreed or strongly disagreed. 48.8% (n=244) agreed their COPD was well managed. Over half the sample (56.8%, n=284) said they never forgot to use their inhaler as prescribed. Checks on inhaler use by doctors or nurses were reported as every six months/twice a year by 24.4% (n=122) and once a year by 38.8% (n=194). However, 17.2% (n=86) said their technique had never been checked, and at their last annual review, a third (33.2%, n=166) did not receive inhaler technique advice. Exacerbations were reported to affect an average of 7.4 days a year. They led to time in hospital, time off work and significantly affected quality of life. Patients reported that their COPD affected all aspects of their daily lives to a greater or lesser extent, with some living in fear of what the impact of the next flare-up could bring.

Conclusion

COPD impairs people’s ability to carry out daily tasks, leads to hospital admission, time off work and even unemployment. Respondents reported stress, worry and depression or low mood because of their COPD. This study highlights areas of concern for patients not being addressed by health care practitioners, including: pulmonary rehabilitation referral, better information giving and medicines optimization.

Disclosure

Mr Steve Titmarsh and Mr Richard E Russell report personal fees from Chiesi Limited to draft this article. Mr Michele Poliziani inputted into the article and reviewed its content as part of his work on the patient survey. Editorial assistance was provided by M&F Health, London on behalf of Chiesi Limited. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work.