Psychosocial issues need more attention in COPD self-management education

Objective: To find out how regularly the contents of patient education regarded as essential for COPD patients’ self-management are provided by healthcare professionals in specialised healthcare (SHC) and primary healthcare (PHC) in Finland. Design: A cross-sectional study based on an e-questionnair...

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Main Authors: Hannele Siltanen, Tiina Aine, Heini Huhtala, Marja Kaunonen, Tuula Vasankari, Eija Paavilainen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2020.1717087
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spelling doaj-03874f400a884abeae033ed8aafd3d0e2020-11-24T21:00:47ZengTaylor & Francis GroupScandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care0281-34321502-77242020-01-01381475510.1080/02813432.2020.17170871717087Psychosocial issues need more attention in COPD self-management educationHannele Siltanen0Tiina Aine1Heini Huhtala2Marja Kaunonen3Tuula Vasankari4Eija Paavilainen5Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere UniversityTampere UniversityFaculty of Social Sciences, Tampere UniversityFaculty of Social Sciences, Tampere UniversityUniversity of TurkuFaculty of Social Sciences, Tampere UniversityObjective: To find out how regularly the contents of patient education regarded as essential for COPD patients’ self-management are provided by healthcare professionals in specialised healthcare (SHC) and primary healthcare (PHC) in Finland. Design: A cross-sectional study based on an e-questionnaire with 42 items on the content of self-management education of COPD patients. Setting: The study sample included all public SHC units with pulmonary outpatient clinics (n = 29) and nine out of 160 health centres in Finland. Subjects: 83 doctors and 162 nurses. Main outcome measures: The respondents’ answers on how regularly they included the contents regarded as essential for COPD patients’ self-management in their education of COPD patients. Results: COPD patients were educated regularly on medical issues regarding COPD treatment, such as smoking cessation, exercise and pharmacological treatment. However, issues vital for coping with the disease, such as psychological well-being, stress management or fatigue, were often ignored. Patient education in SHC seemed to be more systematic than education in PHC. The education provided by the asthma/COPD nurses (n = 70) was more systematic than the education provided by the other nurses (n = 84). Conclusion: Healthcare professionals’ continuous education should cover not only the medical but also the psychosocial aspects of coping with COPD. The role of doctors and nurses should be considered to ensure that there is no gap in COPD patients’ education. Training asthma/COPD nurses and promoting specialised nurse-led asthma/COPD clinics in primary care could be beneficial while improving practices of patient education that enhance patients’ ability to cope with the disease.KEY POINTS Issues vital for coping with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), such as psychological well-being, stress and fatigue, are irregularly included in self-management education both in primary and specialised healthcare. Patient education provided by asthma/COPD nurses is more regular than patient education provided by other nurses. The distribution of work between doctors and nurses should be considered to ensure that there is no gap in COPD patients’ education.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2020.1717087copdpatient educationself-managementspecialised healthcareprimary healthcareasthma/copd nurses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hannele Siltanen
Tiina Aine
Heini Huhtala
Marja Kaunonen
Tuula Vasankari
Eija Paavilainen
spellingShingle Hannele Siltanen
Tiina Aine
Heini Huhtala
Marja Kaunonen
Tuula Vasankari
Eija Paavilainen
Psychosocial issues need more attention in COPD self-management education
Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
copd
patient education
self-management
specialised healthcare
primary healthcare
asthma/copd nurses
author_facet Hannele Siltanen
Tiina Aine
Heini Huhtala
Marja Kaunonen
Tuula Vasankari
Eija Paavilainen
author_sort Hannele Siltanen
title Psychosocial issues need more attention in COPD self-management education
title_short Psychosocial issues need more attention in COPD self-management education
title_full Psychosocial issues need more attention in COPD self-management education
title_fullStr Psychosocial issues need more attention in COPD self-management education
title_full_unstemmed Psychosocial issues need more attention in COPD self-management education
title_sort psychosocial issues need more attention in copd self-management education
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
issn 0281-3432
1502-7724
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Objective: To find out how regularly the contents of patient education regarded as essential for COPD patients’ self-management are provided by healthcare professionals in specialised healthcare (SHC) and primary healthcare (PHC) in Finland. Design: A cross-sectional study based on an e-questionnaire with 42 items on the content of self-management education of COPD patients. Setting: The study sample included all public SHC units with pulmonary outpatient clinics (n = 29) and nine out of 160 health centres in Finland. Subjects: 83 doctors and 162 nurses. Main outcome measures: The respondents’ answers on how regularly they included the contents regarded as essential for COPD patients’ self-management in their education of COPD patients. Results: COPD patients were educated regularly on medical issues regarding COPD treatment, such as smoking cessation, exercise and pharmacological treatment. However, issues vital for coping with the disease, such as psychological well-being, stress management or fatigue, were often ignored. Patient education in SHC seemed to be more systematic than education in PHC. The education provided by the asthma/COPD nurses (n = 70) was more systematic than the education provided by the other nurses (n = 84). Conclusion: Healthcare professionals’ continuous education should cover not only the medical but also the psychosocial aspects of coping with COPD. The role of doctors and nurses should be considered to ensure that there is no gap in COPD patients’ education. Training asthma/COPD nurses and promoting specialised nurse-led asthma/COPD clinics in primary care could be beneficial while improving practices of patient education that enhance patients’ ability to cope with the disease.KEY POINTS Issues vital for coping with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), such as psychological well-being, stress and fatigue, are irregularly included in self-management education both in primary and specialised healthcare. Patient education provided by asthma/COPD nurses is more regular than patient education provided by other nurses. The distribution of work between doctors and nurses should be considered to ensure that there is no gap in COPD patients’ education.
topic copd
patient education
self-management
specialised healthcare
primary healthcare
asthma/copd nurses
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2020.1717087
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