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TOPLINE: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) guidelines are significantly underutilized in clinical practice, with studies attempting to improve implementation yielding inconsistent results. A team of US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) researchers developed a pilot program and surveyed both patients and primary care practitioners (PCPs) to better understand the barriers to guideline-based COPD care primary care settings.

METHODOLOGY: 

  •      Researchers conducted a pilot study using an implementation design at the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System (CAVHS) to explore implementation gaps in a primary care setting
  •      Analysis included semi-structured interviews with 17 respondents, comprising both patients and PCPs, to explore barriers and facilitators to 4 COPD clinical practice guidelines
  •      The Consolidated Framework of Implementation Science was used to design interview guides focusing on inhaler education, spirometry, pulmonary rehabilitation, and COPD-specific patient education
  •      Primary care teams followed a collaborative model including physicians, advanced practice nurses, nurses, social workers, pharmacists, and administrative staff working together with patients

TAKEAWAY:

  •      A total of 17 respondents, including patients and PCPs participated in the study, with the patient sample reflecting the general COPD population at CAVHS
  •      Both PCPs and patients consistently rated all assessed COPD clinical practice guidelines as highly important, despite significant practice gaps in implementation
  •      PCPs reported very low rates of providing education on inhaler use, citing time constraints, lack of educational resources, and low familiarity as primary barriers
  •      The main PCP-related barriers to pulmonary rehabilitation included limited knowledge about the program, unfamiliarity with CAVHS resources, and challenges with the referral process

IN PRACTICE: "Reasons behind this insufficient uptake of COPD guidelines include providers' low familiarity with guidelines, perception of minimal value of guidelines, and time constraints. Studies attempting to improve COPD-CPG uptake have shown mixed results and the best practice to bridge this implementation gap remains unknown," wrote the authors of the study.[Note To Staff: This quote was picked by Plume]

 

SOURCE: The study was led by Deepa Raghavan, Karen L Drummond, Sonya Sanders, and JoAnn Kirchner at Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System. It was published online in Chronic Respiratory Disease.

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TOPLINE: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) guidelines are significantly underutilized in clinical practice, with studies attempting to improve implementation yielding inconsistent results. A team of US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) researchers developed a pilot program and surveyed both patients and primary care practitioners (PCPs) to better understand the barriers to guideline-based COPD care primary care settings.

METHODOLOGY: 

  •      Researchers conducted a pilot study using an implementation design at the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System (CAVHS) to explore implementation gaps in a primary care setting
  •      Analysis included semi-structured interviews with 17 respondents, comprising both patients and PCPs, to explore barriers and facilitators to 4 COPD clinical practice guidelines
  •      The Consolidated Framework of Implementation Science was used to design interview guides focusing on inhaler education, spirometry, pulmonary rehabilitation, and COPD-specific patient education
  •      Primary care teams followed a collaborative model including physicians, advanced practice nurses, nurses, social workers, pharmacists, and administrative staff working together with patients

TAKEAWAY:

  •      A total of 17 respondents, including patients and PCPs participated in the study, with the patient sample reflecting the general COPD population at CAVHS
  •      Both PCPs and patients consistently rated all assessed COPD clinical practice guidelines as highly important, despite significant practice gaps in implementation
  •      PCPs reported very low rates of providing education on inhaler use, citing time constraints, lack of educational resources, and low familiarity as primary barriers
  •      The main PCP-related barriers to pulmonary rehabilitation included limited knowledge about the program, unfamiliarity with CAVHS resources, and challenges with the referral process

IN PRACTICE: "Reasons behind this insufficient uptake of COPD guidelines include providers' low familiarity with guidelines, perception of minimal value of guidelines, and time constraints. Studies attempting to improve COPD-CPG uptake have shown mixed results and the best practice to bridge this implementation gap remains unknown," wrote the authors of the study.[Note To Staff: This quote was picked by Plume]

 

SOURCE: The study was led by Deepa Raghavan, Karen L Drummond, Sonya Sanders, and JoAnn Kirchner at Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System. It was published online in Chronic Respiratory Disease.

TOPLINE: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) guidelines are significantly underutilized in clinical practice, with studies attempting to improve implementation yielding inconsistent results. A team of US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) researchers developed a pilot program and surveyed both patients and primary care practitioners (PCPs) to better understand the barriers to guideline-based COPD care primary care settings.

METHODOLOGY: 

  •      Researchers conducted a pilot study using an implementation design at the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System (CAVHS) to explore implementation gaps in a primary care setting
  •      Analysis included semi-structured interviews with 17 respondents, comprising both patients and PCPs, to explore barriers and facilitators to 4 COPD clinical practice guidelines
  •      The Consolidated Framework of Implementation Science was used to design interview guides focusing on inhaler education, spirometry, pulmonary rehabilitation, and COPD-specific patient education
  •      Primary care teams followed a collaborative model including physicians, advanced practice nurses, nurses, social workers, pharmacists, and administrative staff working together with patients

TAKEAWAY:

  •      A total of 17 respondents, including patients and PCPs participated in the study, with the patient sample reflecting the general COPD population at CAVHS
  •      Both PCPs and patients consistently rated all assessed COPD clinical practice guidelines as highly important, despite significant practice gaps in implementation
  •      PCPs reported very low rates of providing education on inhaler use, citing time constraints, lack of educational resources, and low familiarity as primary barriers
  •      The main PCP-related barriers to pulmonary rehabilitation included limited knowledge about the program, unfamiliarity with CAVHS resources, and challenges with the referral process

IN PRACTICE: "Reasons behind this insufficient uptake of COPD guidelines include providers' low familiarity with guidelines, perception of minimal value of guidelines, and time constraints. Studies attempting to improve COPD-CPG uptake have shown mixed results and the best practice to bridge this implementation gap remains unknown," wrote the authors of the study.[Note To Staff: This quote was picked by Plume]

 

SOURCE: The study was led by Deepa Raghavan, Karen L Drummond, Sonya Sanders, and JoAnn Kirchner at Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System. It was published online in Chronic Respiratory Disease.

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