Breathing New Life Into Acute Respiratory Care: Proactively Improving Long-Term Outcomes

Rachel Danks
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Abstract

Admissions due to asthma contribute substantially to the burden faced by emergency departments (ED) worldwide, with a considerable impact arising from the high number of readmissions among patients with severe asthma. Repeated ED readmittance not only places considerable demand on healthcare resources, but also increases the humanistic burden on patients through reduced lung function, decreased quality of life, and increased exposure to systemic corticosteroids (SCS) and oral corticosteroids (OCS). In addition, patients are subject to the increased morbidity and mortality risk, and quality of life deficit associated with repeated asthma exacerbations. Admission to the ED should be seen as an opportunity to break this readmission cycle and prevent further admissions, while offering patient-centric benefits, such as investigation into the underlying causes of disease, and optimisation of care to prevent further exacerbations. Actions that require no additional resource may be taken directly in the ED, including biomarker tests among routine blood tests, or teaching inhaler technique as part of patient education and safety-netting. In addition, patient discharge may be considered as an opportunity for improving guidance implementation and breaking the cycle of readmission. Unlike emergency cardiac care, where >90% of patients are discharged on secondary prevention drugs and 85% of patients are referred to follow-up rehabilitation, guidelines for care following an ED visit for asthma are not always followed. Furthermore, current tools designed to accelerate specialist referral are not always rigorously implemented following an ED visit, meaning that follow-up may be delayed. Finally, further efforts should be made to identify high-risk patients in the community earlier in the disease pathway, allowing timely intervention before further lung function impairment, or the onset of adverse events due to OCS over-exposure. This article summarises an AstraZeneca-sponsored symposium delivered on 12th September 2023, as part of the European Respiratory Society (ERS) International Congress in Milan, Italy. The faculty, consisting of David Price, Head of the Observational and Pragmatic Research Institute, Singapore; Mona Al-Ahmad, Consultant Allergist and Clinical Immunologist at the Ministry of Health in Kuwait; and Mohit Bhutani, Professor of Medicine at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada, each gave a brief presentation on proactive strategies to improve long-term outcomes in acute respiratory care. During panel discussions following each presentation, Anne Marie Marley, Respiratory Nurse Consultant from Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, UK, provided examples of implementing transition of care by bridging hospital and community care settings.
为急性呼吸系统护理注入新生命:积极改善长期结果
因哮喘而入院的患者在很大程度上增加了全世界急诊科(ED)所面临的负担,其中严重哮喘患者再入院的人数之多产生了相当大的影响。反复的急诊再入院不仅对医疗资源造成了相当大的需求,而且通过肺功能下降、生活质量下降、全身皮质类固醇(SCS)和口服皮质类固醇(OCS)暴露增加,增加了患者的人文负担。此外,患者还面临着发病率和死亡率增加的风险,以及与哮喘反复恶化相关的生活质量下降。进入急诊科应被视为打破这种再入院循环和防止进一步入院的机会,同时提供以患者为中心的利益,如调查疾病的潜在原因,优化护理以防止进一步恶化。不需要额外资源的行动可以直接在急诊科进行,包括常规血液检查中的生物标志物测试,或作为患者教育和安全网络的一部分教授吸入器技术。此外,患者出院可被视为改善指导实施和打破再入院循环的机会。与急诊心脏护理不同的是,在急诊心脏护理中,90%的患者出院后服用二级预防药物,85%的患者转诊后接受随访康复治疗,哮喘急诊科就诊后的护理指南并不总是得到遵守。此外,目前旨在加速专家转诊的工具并不总是在急诊科就诊后严格执行,这意味着随访可能会延迟。最后,应进一步努力在疾病通路的早期识别社区中的高危患者,以便在进一步肺功能损害或因OCS过度暴露引起的不良事件发生之前及时干预。本文总结了2023年9月12日在意大利米兰举行的欧洲呼吸学会(ERS)国际大会上由阿斯利康赞助的研讨会。教师包括David Price,新加坡观察与实用研究所所长;Mona Al-Ahmad,科威特卫生部过敏症专科医生和临床免疫学家;和加拿大埃德蒙顿阿尔伯塔大学医学教授Mohit Bhutani分别简要介绍了改善急性呼吸护理长期结果的主动战略。在每次报告后的小组讨论中,来自英国贝尔法斯特卫生和社会护理信托基金的呼吸系统护士顾问Anne Marie Marley提供了通过连接医院和社区护理环境来实施护理过渡的例子。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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