Tag Archives: Tobacco

World COPD Day,2011 and the Governor’s Proclamation meet in Bremerton’s City Council TODAY

Happy World COPD Day today – 16 November 2011!   (Local recognition activity follows….and Bremerton’s Mayor Patty Lent leads the way)  Sorry, I’m running a little late.

In addition – a new lung connection in the newly completed 20-year study found that COPD patients are five times more likely to develop lung cancer than normal lung folks are.  The warning is to offer Spirometry to detect COPD in the early stages to cut cancer and COPD deaths.  The investigative paper gave the shout-out in the prestigious European Respiratory Journal.

“It comes as an exclusive investigation by GP found a lack of PCT investment in the gold standard treatment for COPD is undermining patients’ quality of life and increasing practice workload.

Around one in 100 patients with the chronic disease developed cancer, compared with one in 500 without lung impairment.

Testing the lung function of former and active smokers would identify COPD earlier, thereby improving early detection of lung cancer and improving survival chances, it found.

Lead author Yasuo Sekine, of Tokyo Women’s Medical University, said: ‘The findings from our analysis suggest that early detection of COPD in addition to lung cancer screening for these patients could be an effective detection technique for lung cancer. However, further research is still needed to determine the selection criteria for COPD and lung cancer screening.’

Monica Fletcher, chairperson of the European Lung Foundation, said millions had COPD but it was often undetected.

‘People frequently ignore the symptoms of lung disease and leave it too late before going to the doctor, she said. ‘This research highlights the need for routine lung function tests, known as spirometry, to help improve quality of life and identify other conditions that could be present.’

Professor Klaus Rabe, president of the European Respiratory Society, said ‘On World COPD Day, we would also urge European governments to improve early detection of respiratory diseases, such as COPD.’

Meanwhile, patients’ respiratory associations across Europe said governments must work harder to reduce the £28 billion annual cost of COPD.

Proposals from the European Federation of Allergy and Airways Diseases Patients’ Associations to reduce this burden include listing COPD as a warning on tobacco products, improving access to spirometry and funding research on how to avoid exacerbations.

 

http://www.gponline.com/News/article/1104308/detect-copd-cut-cancer-deaths-experts-urge/

The Better Breather’s Respiratory Support Group meets today at Harrison Silverdale -in the Rose room from 1:00pm – 3:00 pm.  Pam O’Flynn will introduce Harrison’s new Respiratory Clinical Practice Educator, Martin Robin.  I know the meeting will be informative and lively no matter the topic and hope to see you there!

http://www.harrisonmedical.org/home/calendar/4903

“We welcome any community member with asthma, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, sarcoidosis, asbestosis, pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary fibrosis and the many more lung diseases affecting our population, pediatric or adult.”

Harrison Silverdale – 1800 NW Myhre Road – Silverdale, WA 98383

Pamela O’Flynn – 360-744-6685 – respiratorycare@harrisonmedical.org

 

Today – at 5:30 pm – Bremerton’s Mayor Patty Lent makes COPD, Kitsap County and Washington State history.  She is the first mayor in Washington State to present Governor Christine Gregoire’s Proclamation declaring November 2011 State COPD Month, to my knowledge.  Her generosity in recognizing the 3rd leading cause of death in the US is precious by recognizing today, 16 November 2011 as World COPD Day!

District 3, Manette’s hard working effective and beneficial city council member, Adam Brockus will present the Proclamation to Karma Foley of Seabeck who lost both parents to COPD.  Karma’s mom had the inherited type of COPD and with her oxygen tank, went out of her way to help me with several COPD/EFFORTS public meetings we put together a few years ago.

This COPD  historic event happens at 5:30 pm in the Norm Dicks Government Building city council chambers.  I will be taking pictures for y’all and trying not to let my eyes leak. Thank you!

I will ride a recumbent trike from Evergreen Park to the NDGB or walk it instead…very cold and wet out there.

Thanks for reading… Sharon O’Hara

Will the Kitsap County Health District Get Involved?

A office Spirometer costs about $800. At least one Kitsap County resident has pledged to donate the machine to the KCHD – Will the Kitsap County Health District – Finally – Play Early Detection Spirometry?

WHEN will the Kitsap County Health District (KCHD) get concerned with early detection Spirometry testing for COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease) the 4th leading cause of death in the country?

120,000 people die each year from COPD …many of them could have been stopped in its tracks by early detection.

Thanks to Steve Nelson we know Kitsap County has about 9,200 diagnosed COPDers. This slow developing disease takes about twenty years to develop symptoms enough to tell the doctor. The educated guess is that another 9,200 or more are undetected. A Spirometry test could save lives and millions in public funds to medically treat COPDers and other diseases that may develop after COPD opens the door.

The KCHD’s stated online Program Goal in part:

“Community Health Promotion carries out the Health District’s mission by developing and implementing culturally competent outreach and educational programs and policies to positively influence health behavior and health choices among Kitsap County residents.

* Community mobilization;
* Coalition development and collaboration with external
partners;
* Health education intervention planning, implementation, and evaluation;
* Utilization of social marketing strategies;
* Utilizing a strength-based (asset framework).

Community Health Promotion areas of focus include:

* Tobacco Prevention and Control;
* Injury Prevention;
* Kitsap Gets Active;
* Outreach to Hispanic Families;
* Adolescent Health Education;
* Breast and Cervical Health;…”

http://www.kitsapcountyhealth.com/community_health/health_promotion/hp_index.htm

Where is early detection Spirometry testing for COPD?

The KCHD is involved with Breast and Cervical Health when COPD kills more people per year than Breast and Lung Cancer combined.
COPD is ignored.

‘Tobacco Prevention and Control’ is listed. 80% of COPDers were smokers.

KCHD ignores COPD early detection.

Medscape says:

“… Several well-recognized criteria have been established for the use of medical tests that have been proposed for the early detection of disease, [30-34] and spirometry for the detection of COPD in adult cigarette smokers fulfills all of these criteria:

1. The disease, if not detected early, would go on to cause substantial morbidity or mortality;

2. Treatment is available that is more effective when used at the early stage before the development of symptoms than when used after the symptoms develop; and

3. A feasible testing and follow-up strategy is available that
a. minimizes the false-positive and false-negative rates,
b. is relatively simple and affordable,
c. uses a safe test, and
d. includes an action plan that minimizes potential adverse effects.

The above criteria are usually applied to screening tests, defined as medical tests done for individuals who have no symptoms or signs that suggest the possibility of disease.

Office spirometry is considered to be a part of a clinical evaluation and does not fall under the definition of a screening test when performed for patients with respiratory symptoms who are seen during a clinical encounter (whether or not they have a history of cigarette smoking). Also, if the patient has been diagnosed as having tobacco addiction (a disease with a code in the International Classification of Diseases, ninth revision), office spirometry may be indicated to assess the severity of that disease and is not then considered to be a screening test. Although the NLHEP does not recommend office spirometry for screening unselected populations or for testing patients who have no cardiopulmonary risk factors, the next section of this document provides evidence that office spirometry fulfills all of the criteria listed above when it is used to detect COPD in adult smokers.

The Disease, If Not Detected Early, Would Go On to Cause Substantial Morbidity or Mortality

Office Spirometry Is Relatively Simple and Affordable

Spirometry is a relatively simple, noninvasive test. Office spirometry takes only a few minutes of the patient’s and technician’s time and includes a few athletic-type breathing maneuvers of 6 s duration. The economic costs of a spirometry test include the cost of the instrument and the cost of personnel time (both training and testing). Diagnostic spirometers currently cost about $2,000, and about $10 of time per test is spent in testing (including training time) and disposable supplies. Office spirometers will cost , $800 and require even less testing time than diagnostic spirometers. Adding a post-bronchodilator spirometry test for asthma adds about 15 min to the test time (but is not needed for COPD evaluations).

COPD is the most important lung disease encountered and the fourth leading cause of death in the United States, and it affects at least 16 million people.[7,35] Of the top causes of mortality in the United States, only the death rate for COPD continues to rise, increasing by 22% in the past decade. The 10-year mortality rate for COPD after diagnosis is > 50%.[36] In addition, the number of patients with COPD has doubled in the last 25 years, with the prevalence of COPD now rising faster in women than in men.[37] Although the frequency of hospitalization for many illnesses is decreasing, the number of hospital discharges for COPD rose in the last decade. COPD causes 50 million days per year of bed disability and 14 million days per year of restricted activity.[38,39] COPD causes about 100,000 deaths per year, 550,000 hospitalizations per year, 16 million office visits per year, and $13 billion per year in medical costs, including home care.[35]

Treatment Is Available That Is More Effective When Used at the Early Stage of COPD, Before the Development of Symptoms, Than When Used After Symptoms Develop

COPD is a slowly progressive, chronic disease …”

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/405948_2

Part 1 More later…. Sharon O’Hara