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Attitudes to specialist palliative care and advance care planning in people with COPD: a multi-national survey of palliative and respiratory medicine specialists
Authors:Natasha Smallwood  David Currow  Sara Booth  Anna Spathis  Louis Irving  Jennifer Philip
Affiliation:1.Department of Respiratory and Sleep Medicine,The Royal Melbourne Hospital,Melbourne,Australia;2.Department of Medicine (Royal Melbourne Hospital),University of Melbourne,Melbourne,Australia;3.IMPACCT - Improving Palliative, Aged and Chronic Care through Clinical Research and Translation, Faculty of Health,University of Technology Sydney,Ultimo,Australia;4.University of Cambridge,Cambridge,UK;5.Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,Cambridge,UK;6.Palliative Medicine, St Vincent’s Hospital and Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre,University of Melbourne,Melbourne,Australia;7.St Vincent’s Hospital,Melbourne,Australia
Abstract:

Background

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) guidelines recommend early access to palliative care together with optimal, disease-directed therapy for people with advanced disease, however, this occurs infrequently. This study explored the approaches of respiratory and palliative medicine specialists to palliative care and advance care planning (ACP) in advanced COPD.

Methods

An online survey was emailed to all specialists and trainees in respiratory medicine in Australia and New Zealand (ANZ), and to all palliative medicine specialists and trainees in ANZ and the United Kingdom.

Results

Five hundred seventy-seven (33.1%) responses were received, with 440 (25.2%) complete questionnaires included from 177 respiratory and 263 palliative medicine doctors. Most respiratory doctors (140, 80.9%) were very or quite comfortable providing a palliative approach themselves to people with COPD. 113 (63.8%) respiratory doctors recommended referring people with advanced COPD to specialist palliative care, mainly for access to: psychosocial and spiritual care (105, 59.3%), carer support (104, 58.5%), and end-of-life care (94, 53.1%). 432 (98.2%) participants recommended initiating ACP discussions. Palliative medicine doctors were more likely to recommend discussing: what palliative care is (p p =?0.004). Themes highlighted in open responses included: inadequate, fragmented models of care, with limited collaboration or support from palliative care services.

Conclusions

While both specialties recognised the significant palliative care and ACP needs of people with advanced COPD, in reality few patients access these elements of care. Formal collaboration and bi-directional support between respiratory and palliative medicine, are required to address these unmet needs.
Keywords:
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