• Chest · Oct 2024

    Review

    Understanding non-pharmacological palliative care for people with serious COPD: the individual and organizational perspective.

    • Kristoffer Marsaa, Mai-Britt Guldin, Alda Marques, Hilary Pinnock, and JanssenDaisy J ADJADepartment of Health Services Research and Department of Family Medicine, Care and Public Health Research Institute, Faculty of Health Medicine and Life Sciences, Maastricht University, Maastricht; Department of Research and Development.
    • Steno Diabetes Center Copenhagen, Herlev, Aarhus, Denmark. Electronic address: dokmarsaa@gmail.com.
    • Chest. 2024 Oct 3.

    Topic ImportanceThis narrative review emphasizes the growing interest in palliative care for people with serious lung diseases such as COPD. It reflects on recent publications from the American Thoracic Society, the World Health Organization, and European Respiratory Society, with a focus on nonpharmacologic palliative care for people with COPD from both the health care professional and organizational perspective.Review FindingsThe concept of palliative care has changed over time and is now seen as applicable throughout the entire disease trajectory according to need, in conjunction with any disease-modifying therapies. Palliative care should pay attention to the needs of the person with COPD as well as the informal caregiver. Timely integration of palliative care with disease-modifying treatment requires assessment of needs at the individual level as well as organizational changes. High-quality communication, including advance care planning, is a cornerstone of palliative care.SummaryTherefore, services should be based on the understanding that palliative care is not only specific standardized actions and treatments, but rather a holistic approach that includes compassionate communication, treatment, and care addressing the patient and informal and formal caregivers. Living with and dying of COPD is much more than objective measurements. It is the sum of relationships with others and the experience of living in the best possible harmony with one's own values and hopes, despite having a serious illness.Copyright © 2024 American College of Chest Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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