Science and Research

[Patient perspective of the importance of asthma- and COPD-specific rehabilitation components: A secondary data analysis]

Little is known about the importance that patients attribute to individual rehabilitation components (RCs) and about which factors influence the patients' perspective and the impact of this judgment on the perceived success of the rehabilitation process. To address these questions, the data of 759 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or bronchial asthma, who were interviewed at the end of their rehabilitation about the subjective importance of various RCs, were analysed retrospectively. The patients were pooled from our previous studies "Prospektive Katamnesestudie zur Asthma-Rehabilitation" (ProKAR) and "Routinemassiges Inspirationsmuskeltraining in der COPD-Rehabilitation" (RIMTCORE). Asthma patients and COPD patients differed in their assessments. Their evaluation was also affected by personal parameters such as sex, comorbidities, quality of life and the perceived effectiveness of the "rehabilitation as a whole". Patients considered all RCs to be essential, with minor differences. However, the patients' assessment of the importance of the RCs was in the closest possible agreement with the evidence available for the effectivity of multimodal rehabilitation. The added value of the proposed study is to generate further insight into the upcoming scientific field of personal rating of therapy components.

  • Lingner, H.
  • Schmidt, K.
  • Aumann-Suslin, I.
  • Wittmann, M.
  • Schuler, M.
  • Schultz, K.

Keywords

  • *Asthma
  • *copd
  • *Lebensqualitat
  • *Patientenperspektive
  • *patient perspective
  • *pneumologische Rehabilitation
  • *pulmonary rehabilitation
  • *quality of life
Publication details
DOI: 10.1016/j.zefq.2018.03.008
Journal: Zeitschrift fur Evidenz, Fortbildung und Qualitat im Gesundheitswesen
Pages: 41-49 
Work Type: Original
Location: BREATH
Disease Area: AA, COPD
Partner / Member: MHH
Access-Number: 29705355
See publication on PubMed

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