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Asthma patients 'dying needlessly'

foolsgold

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Asthma patients are dying needlessly as a result of poor care , a damning new report has found.

Experts identified " major avoidable factors" in two thirds of asthma deaths examined.

Patients are receiving inadequate information, education and advice on managing their asthma, according to the document.

Meanwhile medics are failing to spot key signs which point to patients not managing their condition well.

These factors are leading to a large number of deaths which could otherwise have been prevented, the report says.

In the UK, three people die from asthma every day and every 10 seconds someone suffers from a potentially life-threatening attack.

Experts from the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) examined 195 asthma deaths, including 28 children.

They identified at least one "major potential avoidable factor" in 67% of the cases.

GP Dr Mark Levy, RCP's clinical lead for the report, said: " It is very sad that people are not aware that asthma can kill.

"Doctors, patients and their families failed to recognise life-threatening danger signs of asthma.

"We identified major avoidable factors in two-thirds of the people who died."

The review found that m any of the patients who died had excessively used their reliever inhalers in the months running up to their deaths - indicating that they were not managing their disease well.

Medics should have spotted that they were repeatedly prescribing these inhalers and taken action, the authors said.

Meanwhile one in 10 of those who died had been admitted to hospital for an acute asthma attack within four weeks of their death.

The report found that 45% of those people who died following an asthma failed to call for help or obtain help during their attack and the vast majority of children died even before they reached hospital.

Dr Levy said: "It might be that in these cases people were complacent about their asthma and we feel that the majority of these people did not know what to do - they did not recognise the danger signs they did not know how or when to call for help."

He said that three quarters of those who died did not have a personalised asthma plan which would have provided them with this information.

The experts said that half of those who died were being treated for mild or moderate asthma at the time - indicating that neither patients or medics realised how serious the cases were.

The report concluded: "The review found deficiencies in both the routine care of asthma patients and the treatment of attacks.

"In many instances neither doctors nor patients recognised the signs of deteriorating asthma; they also did not react quickly enough when these were seen."

The authors called for an end to "complacency" around asthma care.

Charity Asthma UK said that prescribing errors were detected in 47% of the deaths studied.

It said that it was "shocking" that experts identified "room for improvement" in 83% of the cases.

Kay Boycott, chief executive of the charity, said: "This confidential enquiry has identified prescribing errors of a frankly horrifying scale and is a damning indictment of current routine practice.

"In many of these cases the warning signs were ignored; past attacks are a clear risk factor for future attacks but more than two thirds of the people hospitalised in the month before they died didn't get properly checked up afterwards.

"Parents of children with asthma will be especially horrified that the confidential enquiry showed that children fared worse than adults in multiple aspects of care, and fell well below expected standards in almost half of child deaths.

"Above all, we need leadership at every tier of the health system across the UK to challenge the complacency about asthma and prevent life threatening asthma attacks.

"Every 10 seconds someone has a potentially life threatening asthma attack and this report reinforces the need for vigilance in managing your - or your child's - asthma especially if you've recently had an attack, been in hospital or if your asthma is waking you at night."

The report, which is released to coincide with World Asthma Day, s ets out a series of recommendations for healthcare workers including the introduction of an electronic surveillance system to be set up to show doctors and pharmacists when people excessively use reliever medication and do not use enough preventative medication.

And anyone who has been taken to hospital as an emergency should be reviewed within 48 hours.

The authors also said that more must be done to educate people about their condition. Every health care organisation should have one named individual with a responsibility for asthma care, they added.

Dr Levy also said there were also pressures on prescribing costs.

"Doctors are trying to prescribe economically and not necessarily with the clinical efficacy," he said.

"In the National Health Service we have got costs issues so there are pressures right from the top to try and prescribe economically, now that doesn't mean doctors are being told not to prescribe effective medication, they are being told to prescribe medication which is effective and helping people."

In 2012, 1,242 people died from asthma. There are 5.4 million people in the UK who suffer from the condition.

Professor Mike Morgan, NHS England's national clinical director for respiratory services, said: "These statistics are a call to action for commissioners, health professionals and patients.

"Every patient should have a care plan which should be regularly reviewed and patients should be supported to manage their asthma, including effective inhaler technique and knowledge of their condition.

"Treatment should adhere to clinical and prescribing guidelines. In February last year, National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (Nice) produced a set of quality standards which make it clear that local commissioners should integrate services so that asthma sufferers receive a consistently high quality service from childhood to adulthood."

http://news.uk.msn.com/asthma-patients-dying-needlessly-1
 
Not being able to breath is fucking scary. It's honestly extremely terrifying to gasp like a drowning fish (lol) and not be able to feel that cool oxygen in your lungs
 
i have chronic asmatic bronchitis. My airways close and the tubes get irriated. If i dont have my inhaler, i will slowly go back to not being able to breath. Not being able to breath is something you cant relate too unless you experience it. Drowning on land. Ive had a few coughing spells that i didnt know if i was going to make it. The panic sets in too. Ill tell you another reason this country is fucked. sometimes i cant get my inhaler cause i plain cant afford it at fifty three dollars each and if i have a really bad episode and need my steroid inhaler thats almost 250 dollars. You know why it cost that much here, no fuckin reason. Cause they can and thats the market they have set them at.
 
Asthma really sucks. I think it was a lot worse for me when I was younger. I was always plugged into my nebulizer almost every day. And also as a youngster I had some really close calls like the time I found out cats either irritate my asthma or I'm allergic to them and that causes me to have an asthma attack. It doesn't happen anymore, but when I was young I almost died. It could be because I keep my distance from cats though. I don't want to have to find out the hard way.

Then when I hit 15 I did the dumbest thing ever and started smoking cigarettes. After 13 years I ended up smoking 2 packs per day before I quit. But once I did quit, I didn't need albuterol anymore. It's the first time in my life(well as of a year ago) that I didn't need to check my pockets before going out, for keys, phone, wallet and inhaler. It was even more ridiculous when it was keys, phone, wallet, inhaler, cigarette pack, and lighter all in my pockets lol. Once I was off the ciggies though and my lungs cleared out, my sleep apnia/heavy breathing at night went away and my girlfriend is fucking pumped about that, hah. Now all I use is Symbicort, a preventative inhaler that I do twice in the morning and twice at night. So I don't even need to bring it with me everywhere I go. I haven't had an asthma attack since a week after I quit smoking. Something weird must have happened in my lungs like all the tar started breaking down at the same time. I woke up having one of the worst attacks I could remember. It lasted 30 minutes or maybe even 45. Albuterol wasn't working and I had to eventually break out the nebulizer which I rarely need, I'm still not sure if that's what fixed me, because it seemed like it wasn't doing anything, or maybe just time healed me.
 
I thought the Symbicort was the one with the steroids and the albuteral was the preventive one. I use the albuterol as the preventive inhaler and only the Smybicort when it becomes inflamed bad and the albuterol isnt doing it. The Symbicort has the steroids in it which is definitly not good for the body long term which im sure you know.
 
^ I used to use those kinds of things when I had really bad asthma when I was young. As said above it is really scary and horrible when you can't breath, I had to goto hospital a few times when I was younger and I recall before going I was so weak I could hardly walk or breath in any air, it was so frightening, I really thought I was about to die and possibly would have if I didnt get into hospital.

My asthma has pretty much all gone, I havent used any medication in over a decade now. The only issue I had was a punctured lung which I am not sure if it was related to my earlier asthma or not.

Some things I recall from when I used to have really bad asthma were of course a ventolin inhaler, also becotide and pulmicort I think they were called (inhalers also) and a nebuliser machine and I also found putting my head over a boiling pot of water helped.

My father said he had asthma really bad when he was young also then it went away for 30 odd years and then it came back pretty badly for him when he was 50ish. He still has to use asthma medication. I am hoping mine never comes back and I dont smoke anything anymore, just vap some weed sometimes so I'm trying my best to keep it away. I also no longer live in the city and have a much more laid back life in the country with alot of fresh air and not nearly as much pollution anymore, so i'm hoping that helps me too.

Here in Australia 15 or so years ago I noticed my inhalers getting very expensive as well and I dont think they were OTC either. I'm not sure how much they are or how easy they are to get these days, but it seems strange to limit them and make them expensive when it's such a lifesaver for so many, I guess one worry is that some people over use them or abuse them.

Swimming has also helped me I believe, I know there would be times when it's not able to be done, but when you can (if you can) try it, I used the beach and public pools in summer and I think it's been very beneficial for me and my lungs.
 
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