Abstract
BackgroundChronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the second-leading cause of death in the United Kingdom and accounts for 1.7% of bed days in acute hospitals. An estimated two-third of patients with COPD remain undiagnosed.ObjectiveModern Innovative Solutions in Improving Outcomes in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (MISSION COPD) aimed to proactively identify patients from primary care who were undiagnosed or had uncontrolled COPD and to provide a comprehensive integrated multidisciplinary clinic to address the needs of this complex group for improving diagnosis, personalizing therapy, and empowering patients to self-manage their condition.MethodsThis clinic was led by a respiratory specialist team from Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust working with five primary care surgeries in Wessex. A total of 108 patients were reviewed, with 98 patients consenting to provide additional data for research. Diagnoses were changed in 14 patients, and 32 new diagnoses were made.ResultsReductions were seen across all aspects of unscheduled care as compared to the prior 12 months, including in emergency general practitioner visits (3.37-0.79 visits per patient, P<.001), exacerbations (2.64-0.56 per patient, P=.01), out-of-hours calls (0.16-0.05 per patient, P=.42), and hospital admissions (0.49-0.12 per patient, P=.48). Improvements were observed in the quality of life and symptom scores in addition to patient activation and patient-reported confidence levels.ConclusionsThis pilot demonstrates that the MISSION model may be an effective way to provide comprehensive gold-standard care that is valued by patients and to promote integration across sectors.
Highlights
MethodsOver 1 million people in the United Kingdom suffer from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which remains the second-leading cause of death in the United Kingdom
We describe our experience of Modern Innovative Solutions in Improving Outcomes in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (MISSION Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)), a novel model of integrated care for airways disease built on the success of the preceding MISSION Asthma [5] model
This paper describes the implementation of the MISSION COPD pilot project and the patients who accessed the service and summarizes the impact on both patient and health service outcomes
Summary
Over 1 million people in the United Kingdom suffer from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which remains the second-leading cause of death in the United Kingdom. In people who are diagnosed, management within primary care is led by nursing staff and is protocol driven with Quality Outcomes Framework prompts [2], resulting in yearly reviews that are largely disease focused. This approach risks underidentifying comorbidities as well as the psychological and social impacts of COPD. Conclusions: This pilot demonstrates that the MISSION model may be an effective way to provide comprehensive gold-standard care that is valued by patients and to promote integration across sectors
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