Multimorbidity, frailty and COPD: are the challenges for pulmonary rehabilitation in the name?

Anne Holland, Samantha Harrison, Dina Brooks

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    Abstract

    The overwhelming majority of people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have at least one co-existing medical condition often conceptualized as ‘comorbidities’. These co-existing conditions vary in severity and impact; it is likely that for some patients, COPD is not their most important or severe condition. The concepts of multimorbidity and frailty may be useful to understand the broader needs of people with COPD undergoing pulmonary rehabilitation. Multimorbidity describes the co-existence of two or more chronic conditions, without reference to a primary condition. Best care for people with multimorbidity has been described as a shift from providing disease-focused to patient-centred care. Pulmonary rehabilitation is well placed to deliver such care as it focuses on optimizing function, encourages integration across care settings, values input from multidisciplinary teams and measures patient-important outcomes. When designing optimal pulmonary rehabilitation services for people with multimorbidity, the concept of frailty may be useful. Frailty focuses on impairments, rather than medical conditions including impairments in mobility, strength, balance, cognition, nutrition, endurance, mood and physical activity. Emerging data suggest that frailty may be modifiable with pulmonary rehabilitation. The challenge for pulmonary rehabilitation clinicians is to broaden our perspective on the role and outcomes of pulmonary rehabilitation for people with multimorbidity.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)-
    JournalChronic Respiratory Disease
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 7 Oct 2016

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