Less than a fifth of people living with COPD in the UK receive the fundamentals of recommended care, including support with smoking cessation, research shows.
The fundamentals, as recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care, included: smoking cessation support, pneumococcal and influenza vaccination, pulmonary rehabilitation, personalised self-management planning, and optimised treatment for co-morbidities.
'This is a shocking and disappointing result, especially considering that people with COPD are at increased risk from Covid-19, and as such, are amongst those who should have been prioritised to ensure their condition was well managed and controlled as far as possible through the pandemic,' the charity said.
'One year on from our first report in 2021, significant issues with delays to diagnosis and the quality of COPD care identified then have not been resolved and, in many cases, have deteriorated,' the organisation wrote.
Among the survey findings, a quarter of the respondents said they had waited five or more years for a COPD diagnosis, with one in eight waiting more than a decade.
Social inequalities were also apparent with someone from the poorest 10% of households being more than two and a half times more likely to have COPD than someone from the most affluent 10%.
COPD diagnosis needed to be faster and more accurate, the charity said, calling for a range of measures including an urgent increase in the availability of quality-assured spirometry across the system.
In addition, COPD care and treatment should be targeted at people who are most at risk, with the charity urging governments and health services to ensure timely case finding amongst high-risk groups, including smokers, people experiencing homelessness, those who are poorer or in a high-risk occupation.
Asthma + Lung UK has this month also reminded people eligible for the NHS pneumococcal vaccine, including children and adults with severe asthma, pulmonary fibrosis or COPD, to ensure they are protected from pneumonia this winter
Sarah Woolnough, Asthma + Lung UK chief executive, said the UK must do better to protect people from life-threatening chest infections, with an analysis by the charity showing more than 25,000 people die from pneumonia in the UK each year.
'This winter is going to be hard on the nation’s lungs, with higher rates of respiratory infections and many people struggling to stay well with colder homes and fewer food choices,' she added.
Have your say
Please add your comment in the box below. You can include links, but HTML is not permitted. Please note that comments are not moderated before publication and the views expressed are those of the user and do not reflect the views of The Pharmacist. Remember that submission of comments is governed by our Terms and Conditions. You can also read our full guidelines on article comments here – but please be aware that you are legally liable for any libellous or offensive comments that you make. If you have a complaint about a comment or are concerned that a comment breaches our terms and conditions, please use the ‘Report this comment’ function to alert our web team.