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“I’m 59 and was not even going to have the screening done,
but I’m glad I did because the test found a 95 percent blockage in my neck
artery. I had surgery to fix it - before I had a stroke.”
C. WADSWORTH
Enola, PA |
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Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
COPD - 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. 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. 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. COPD causes about 100,000 deaths
per year, 550,000 hospitalizations per year, 16 million office visits per
year, and 13 billion dollars per year in medical costs, including homecare.
COPD is a slowly progressive, chronic disease characterized by
cough, sputum production, dyspnea (difficulty breathing), airflow limitation,
and impaired gas exchange. 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.1
The National Lung Health Education Program (HLHEP) was developed to
increase awareness of lung health in patients, healthcare practitioners,
and health care organizations. This program recommends spirometry,
which is a relatively simple and noninvasive test to detect airway obstruction.
SCREENING INFORMATION
1Respiratory Care, May 2000, Volume 45, Number 5,
pages 513-524. |
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