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      Implementation of ‘matrix support’ (collaborative care) to reduce asthma and COPD referrals and improve primary care management in Brazil: a pilot observational study

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          Abstract

          Asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are leading causes of hospitalisation and death in the city of Sao Bernardo do Campo. The municipality had difficulties in sustaining a pulmonology specialist team. Local policy has strengthened the knowledge of the primary care teams to improve the management of these diseases. Our aim is to pilot the implementation of an educational intervention based on collaborative care focused on reducing respiratory-related referrals. We implemented ‘matrix support’: a Brazilian collaborative educational intervention promoting specialist training and support for primary care physicians in three health territories with the highest number of referrals. Clinicians and nurses from primary care attended an 8-h workshop. The backlog of respiratory referrals was prioritised, where Asthma and COPD represented 70% of referral reasons. Initially, pulmonologists held joint consultations with physicians and nurses; as confidence grew, these were replaced by round-table note-based case discussions. The primary outcome was the number of asthma and COPD referrals. Almost all primary healthcare professionals in the three areas (132 of 157–87%) were trained; 360 patients were discussed, including 220 joint consultations. The number of respiratory referrals dropped from 290 (the year before matrix support) to 134 (the year after) ( P<0.05). Referrals for asthma/COPD decreased from 13.4 to 5.4 cases per month ( P=0.09) and for other lung diseases from 10.8 to 5.3 cases per month ( P<0.05). Knowledge scores showed a significant improvement ( P<0.001). Matrix-support collaborative care was well-accepted by primary care professionals associated with improved knowledge and reduced respiratory referrals. The initiative attracted specialists to the region overcoming historical recruitment problems.

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          A 10 year asthma programme in Finland: major change for the better.

          A National Asthma Programme was undertaken in Finland from 1994 to 2004 to improve asthma care and prevent an increase in costs. The main goal was to lessen the burden of asthma to individuals and society. The action programme focused on implementation of new knowledge, especially for primary care. The main premise underpinning the campaign was that asthma is an inflammatory disease and requires anti-inflammatory treatment from the outset. The key for implementation was an effective network of asthma-responsible professionals and development of a post hoc evaluation strategy. In 1997 Finnish pharmacies were included in the Pharmacy Programme and in 2002 a Childhood Asthma mini-Programme was launched. The incidence of asthma is still increasing, but the burden of asthma has decreased considerably. The number of hospital days has fallen by 54% from 110 000 in 1993 to 51 000 in 2003, 69% in relation to the number of asthmatics (n = 135 363 and 207 757, respectively), with the trend still downwards. In 1993, 7212 patients of working age (9% of 80 133 asthmatics) received a disability pension from the Social Insurance Institution compared with 1741 in 2003 (1.5% of 116 067 asthmatics). The absolute decrease was 76%, and 83% in relation to the number of asthmatics. The increase in the cost of asthma (compensation for disability, drugs, hospital care, and outpatient doctor visits) ended: in 1993 the costs were 218 million euro which had fallen to 213.5 million euro in 2003. Costs per patient per year have decreased 36% (from 1611 euro to 1031 euro). It is possible to reduce the morbidity of asthma and its impact on individuals as well as on society. Improvements would have taken place without the programme, but not of this magnitude.
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            Integrated care pathways for airway diseases (AIRWAYS-ICPs).

            The objective of Integrated Care Pathways for Airway Diseases (AIRWAYS-ICPs) is to launch a collaboration to develop multi-sectoral care pathways for chronic respiratory diseases in European countries and regions. AIRWAYS-ICPs has strategic relevance to the European Union Health Strategy and will add value to existing public health knowledge by: 1) proposing a common framework of care pathways for chronic respiratory diseases, which will facilitate comparability and trans-national initiatives; 2) informing cost-effective policy development, strengthening in particular those on smoking and environmental exposure; 3) aiding risk stratification in chronic disease patients, using a common strategy; 4) having a significant impact on the health of citizens in the short term (reduction of morbidity, improvement of education in children and of work in adults) and in the long-term (healthy ageing); 5) proposing a common simulation tool to assist physicians; and 6) ultimately reducing the healthcare burden (emergency visits, avoidable hospitalisations, disability and costs) while improving quality of life. In the longer term, the incidence of disease may be reduced by innovative prevention strategies. AIRWAYSICPs was initiated by Area 5 of the Action Plan B3 of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing. All stakeholders are involved (health and social care, patients, and policy makers).
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              Integrating real-life studies in the global therapeutic research framework.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                NPJ Prim Care Respir Med
                NPJ Prim Care Respir Med
                NPJ Primary Care Respiratory Medicine
                Nature Publishing Group
                2055-1010
                18 August 2016
                2016
                : 26
                : 16047
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Community Health of the Faculty of Medicine of ABC (FMABC), São Bernardo do Campo , São Paulo, Brazil
                [2 ]Respiratory Group Brazilian Society of Family and Community Medicine (SBMFC), São Bernardo do Campo , São Paulo, Brazil
                [3 ]Pulmonology Service of the University São Camilo Medical School , São Paulo, Brazil
                [4 ]PHC Division-Health Secretary, São Bernardo do Campo , São Paulo, Brazil
                [5 ]International Primary Care Respiratory Group (IPCRG), Westhill, Scotland , UK
                [6 ]Specialized Department, São Bernardo do Campo , São Paulo, Brazil
                [7 ]Community Health, Life and Health Sciences Research Institute (ICVS), School of Health Sciences, University of Minho, Portugal, Horizonte Family Health Unit , Matosinhos, Portugal
                [8 ]Allergy and Respiratory Research Group, Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
                [9 ]Pulmonary Division-Heart Institute (InCor)—Hospital da Clinicas da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo , Sao Paulo, Brazil
                Author notes
                []

                L.P.T., L.E.P., P.D.B. and D.dC. were involved directly in the process of matrix-support implantation (data extraction) and organisation at health local network; S.M.M., W.S.-F. and R.S. were involved in the conception and design, data analysis, interpretation of data and drafting of the manuscript. J.M., H.P., S.W. and J.C.dS. were involved in revising the article critically for important intellectual content.

                Article
                npjpcrm201647
                10.1038/npjpcrm.2016.47
                4989903
                27536853
                5af4029d-fa2e-483c-881d-6fad90901738
                Copyright © 2016 The Author(s)

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                History
                : 21 September 2015
                : 10 June 2016
                : 17 June 2016
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