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Provision of palliative care for people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a narrative review.

Amy Pascoe, Catherine Buchan, Natasha Smallwood

Annals of palliative medicine(2024)

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Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE:Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by persistent and progressive airflow restriction and is the third leading cause of death and disability, globally. People with severe COPD generally experience long-term functional decline punctuated by periods of acute exacerbation. Symptom burden can be severe and debilitating, and typically includes breathlessness, cough, fatigue, pain, anxiety, depression, and overall reduced quality of life. Understanding current palliative care needs and provisions in this group is an essential step to expanding access in future. METHODS:A narrative review of specialist and generalist (primary) palliative care provisions for people with COPD, with an emphasis on breathlessness symptom management. This paper aims to examine the current landscape of palliative care provision and highlight barriers and facilitators to palliative care access for people with severe COPD. KEY CONTENT AND FINDINGS:People living with severe COPD, as well as the people who care for them, are routinely under-serviced in best-practice end-of-life care, despite having symptom burden that is comparable to that of people with advanced cancer. Barriers to palliative care in this group include lack of specialist palliative care resources, uncertainty surrounding prognostication, and poor recognition of need from both patients and clinicians. Routine early palliative care involvement, including integration of specialist palliative care into respiratory services and upskilling of other healthcare providers to adopt palliative care principals within usual care (primary palliative care), have been shown to improve outcomes indicative of high-quality end-of-life care in this group, including symptom control, place of death, and legal preparations. Ongoing integration of specialist palliative care and professional education for generalist and non-palliative care specialist healthcare providers in the recognition and management of unmet palliative care needs is required to increase capacity beyond traditional specialist palliative care models. CONCLUSIONS:Despite high level of symptom burden, many people with COPD miss out on palliative care. Expanding capacity of traditional specialist palliative care by upskilling generalist healthcare providers and integrating specialist palliative care into existing respiratory services is necessary to improve access for people with COPD.
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