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The aim of the study is to develop an interview to ask patients with COPD about their fear of death and dying, their needs and wishes at the end-of-life. Afterwards, the patients receive a brief psychological intervention to develop coping strategies for chronic illness. Beside this a general purpose of this intervention is to improve patients' quality of life.
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Background:
COPD-related mortality differs markedly from that of other chronic diseases. While the mortality rates for heart disease and stroke have fallen significantly, death rates caused by COPD have more than doubled. Therefore there is a major need to address questions of palliative end-of-life care. Patients with end-stage pulmonary lung diseases suffer from dyspnea, severe pain, fatigue and - the "deadlock" in end-of-life communication. Many people with severe COPD are socially isolated, have low quality of life and psychosocial challenges such as sadness, panic or hopelessness. In fact, 70 up to 90% suffer from a clinically relevant depression and/or anxiety disorder. Despite this, the majority of COPD patients with co-morbid disorders don't receive any treatment for their psychological symptoms. Furthermore, there is substantial evidence that only a minority of people with end-stage COPD have the opportunity to discuss their fears and wishes for end-of-life care. The few existing studies on this issue demonstrated that the majority of people with severe COPD wants to discuss topics such as prognosis, fear of death and dying or preferences and needs at the end-of-life. Understanding the nature and implications of treatment options is an important component of advanced care planning for people with end-stage lung disease.
Therefore the aim of this study is to bring up the end-of-life communication to patients with end-stage COPD. We hypothesize that end-stage COPD patients have greater fear of death and dying as patients with mild to moderate COPD or with hip prothesis (control group). The lowest anxiety rate with regard to death should be found in the healthy control group. Furthermore, a brief psychological intervention should decrease the co-morbid psychological symptoms and patients' fears. Higher quality of life should be achieved.
Objectives:
Subjects are recruited from the Pulmonary Rehabilitation Units of the Berchtesgadener Klinikum Schönau, Germany, through direct recruitment and use of administrative databases. All patients providing informed consent are invited to participate, if they have a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with stage II, III or IV by GOLD-criteria. An open three group comparison is made of one-hundred patients with severe COPD (stage III and IV), thirty-three patients with moderate COPD (stage II), thirty-three patients with hip prosthesis and thirty-three mental healthy persons matched for age and sex. As we want to start a first feasibility intervention study, this is a clinical controlled design without randomization.
Methods:
Initially a systematic literature review was performed to determine what methods are being used in COPD studies and how the patients' views can be best assessed. Then a qualitative multi-method design will be used involving semi-structured interviews, standardized questionnaires and lung function parameters.
The face-to-face interview includes ten categories with more than 70 questions on
Patients will be interviewed by a single interviewer. Each question will be read by using everyday language. Interviews will be audiotaped to control for integrity. Each interview will last approximately 60 minutes. The interview will be validated by the COPD-Anxiety-Questionnaire (CAF). To assess the patients cognitions about death, a self-report questionnaire, FIMEST, will be also used.
Standardized questionnaires will be used to detect depression or panic disorders by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Functional health status will be measured by the Patients Health Questionnaire (PHQ) and the COPD-Disability- Index (CDI). The condition specific questionnaire, the Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF-36) and Euroqol (EQ) will be compared for their discriminative and evaluative properties. Spirometric tests and a walking test will be also performed.
After the interview those patients who have increased death anxiety take part in a brief psychological intervention to discuss their end-of-life issues, worries and fears. For this psychological intervention, a manualized 2-3-session approach will be used.
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199 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Winfried Rief, Prof. Dr.; Sabine R Pinzer, Dipl.-Psych.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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