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Pulmonary Rehabilitation

Pulmonary Rehabilitation. Evaluation of the Benefits of Phase III (Maintenance) Pulmonary Rehabilitation on Participants Healthcare Quality of Life and Healthcare Utilization Charley P. Starnes, BSRT, RRT, RCP. Purpose.

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Pulmonary Rehabilitation

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  1. Pulmonary Rehabilitation Evaluation of the Benefits of Phase III (Maintenance) Pulmonary Rehabilitation on Participants Healthcare Quality of Life and Healthcare Utilization Charley P. Starnes, BSRT, RRT, RCP

  2. Purpose • To determine if continued exercise (enrollment in a pulmonary rehabilitation maintenance program) after graduation from a medically-supervised program decreases healthcare utilization, i.e. ER visits/hospitalizations, and maintains/increases participant’s perceived quality of life and dyspnea management

  3. Pulmonary Rehabilitation Phase II • Medically-supervised, outpatient program comprised of exercise and education designed to improve exercise tolerance, decrease perceived dyspnea, increase health-related quality of life, and promote patient self-management • Pulmonary Rehabilitation (PR) has become a standard of care for many chronic lung diseases. • COPD, asthma, pulmonary fibrosis, pulmonary hypertension, and bronchiectasis

  4. Pulmonary Rehabilitation Phase II • Has been shown to decrease perceived dyspnea • Increase participant's quality of life (QoL) while actively participating in the program. • Typical length of program is 4-12 weeks • Highly dependent on patient’s level of conditioning and goals • 2-3 sessions per week • Must be initiated via physician referral

  5. Pulmonary Rehabilitation Phase III(Maintenance) • Option for graduates of a Phase II program • Patients pay a monthly membership fee • able to utilize the rehabilitation facility to exercise and attend education classes

  6. Design • Retrospective cohort study comparing patients who graduated PR, and enrolled in the Phase III maintenance program, to a similar set of patients who chose to exercise on their own after graduation • Patients were recruited from 2 hospital-based, outpatient PR programs in the Carolinas HealthCare System • Must have completed at least 4 weeks of the PR program

  7. Process • Measures for comparison • healthcare utilization • 6 months pre/post PR graduation • Data pulled from EMR • perceived QoL as it relates to their chronic lung disease • Measured via St. George Respiratory Questionnaire post PR graduation and current • dyspnea management • Measured via MMRC post PR graduation and current

  8. Healthcare Utilization • A decrease of 72% is noted in hospitalizations in the Phase III group pre- and post-rehabilitation and a 50% decrease in ER/UC visits • The non-Phase III group shows a 50% decrease in hospitalizations and a 75% decrease in ER/UC visits.

  9. Healthcare Related Quality of Life • St. George Respiratory Questionnaire • Measures 3 QoL domains • Symptoms • Activity • Impact • Decrease of 4 units or more in the total score is considered clinically meaningful improvement

  10. Dyspnea Management • Medical Research Council’s (MMRC) five-point dyspnea scale is used to objectively quantify each patient’s level of dyspnea and is used as a “functional evaluation” • A decrease in MMRC score is considered a reduction in dyspnea

  11. Dyspnea Management • There was no change noted in MMRC scores in either group • Both groups reported an average MMRC score of 2

  12. Conclusion • Patients, whether attending Phase III Pulmonary Rehabilitation or not, both show a decrease in healthcare utilization 6 months after completion of a Pulmonary Rehabilitation program. • Continued exercise is beneficial to all patients, regardless of venue. • While the St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire helps to quantify how a patient’s chronic respiratory disease affects their quality of life, it did not adequately correspond with patient’s perceived overall health.

  13. Conclusion • Natural disease progression continues to affect this patient population and how they manage the symptoms of their disease and their activity levels. • More studies, with longer duration, is needed to determine how beneficial enrollment into a Phase III pulmonary rehabilitation program can be to a patient’s health-related quality of life.

  14. Questions?? Thank you!

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