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Health care utilisation and health needs of people with severe COPD in the southern region of New Zealand: A retrospective case note review

journal contribution
posted on 2020-03-03, 00:00 authored by Jack Dummer, Emma Tumilty, Debbie Hannah, Kathryn McAuley, Jo Baxter, Fiona Doolan-Noble, Simon Donlevy, Tim Stokes
We examined health care utilisation and needs of people with severe COPD in the low-population-density setting of the Southern Region of New Zealand (NZ). We undertook a retrospective case note review of patients with COPD coded as having an emergency department attendance and/or admission with at least one acute exacerbation during 2015 to hospitals in the Southern Region of NZ. Data were collected and analysed from 340 case notes pertaining to: demographics, hospital admissions, outpatient contacts, pulmonary rehabilitation, advance care planning and comorbidities. Geometric mean (95%CI) length of stay for hospital admissions in urban and rural hospitals was 3.0 (2.7-3.4) and 4.0 (2.9-5.4) days respectively. More patients were from areas of higher deprivation but median hospital length of stay for patients from the least deprived areas was 2.0 days longer than others (p = 0.04). There was a median of 4 (range 0-16) comorbidities and 10 medications (range 0-25) per person. Of 169 cases where data was available, 26 (15%) were offered, 17 (10%) declined, and 5 (3%) completed, pulmonary rehabilitation at or in the year prior to the index admission. Patients were less likely to be offered pulmonary rehabilitation if they lived >20km away from the hospital where it took place (odds ratio of 0.12 for those living further away [95%CI 0.02-0.93, p = 0.04]). There were deficits in care: provision and uptake of non-pharmacological interventions was suboptimal and unevenly distributed across the region. Further research is needed to develop and evaluate strategies for delivering non-pharmacological interventions in this setting.

History

Journal

COPD: Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Volume

17

Pagination

136-142

Location

Philadelphia, Pa.

ISSN

1541-2555

eISSN

1541-2563

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2020, Taylor & Francis

Issue

2

Publisher

Taylor & Francis