The impact of the Danish Oxygen Register on adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy in COPD patients.

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Standard

The impact of the Danish Oxygen Register on adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy in COPD patients. / Ringbæk, Thomas Jørgen; Lange, Peter.

I: Respiratory Medicine, Bind 100, Nr. 2, 2006, s. 218-25.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Ringbæk, TJ & Lange, P 2006, 'The impact of the Danish Oxygen Register on adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy in COPD patients.', Respiratory Medicine, bind 100, nr. 2, s. 218-25. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?orig_db=PubMed&db=PubMed&cmd=Search&term=>

APA

Ringbæk, T. J., & Lange, P. (2006). The impact of the Danish Oxygen Register on adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy in COPD patients. Respiratory Medicine, 100(2), 218-25. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?orig_db=PubMed&db=PubMed&cmd=Search&term=

Vancouver

Ringbæk TJ, Lange P. The impact of the Danish Oxygen Register on adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy in COPD patients. Respiratory Medicine. 2006;100(2):218-25.

Author

Ringbæk, Thomas Jørgen ; Lange, Peter. / The impact of the Danish Oxygen Register on adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy in COPD patients. I: Respiratory Medicine. 2006 ; Bind 100, Nr. 2. s. 218-25.

Bibtex

@article{39a8a732260544fc96d7083a462dbc81,
title = "The impact of the Danish Oxygen Register on adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy in COPD patients.",
abstract = "OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of The Danish Oxygen Register on COPD patients' treatment modalities, survival, and adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT). DESIGN: The Danish Oxygen Register. SUBJECTS: 8487 COPD patients who received LTOT in the study period from November 1, 1994, to December 31, 2000. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Follow-up, smoking status, correct prescription of LTOT (15-24h/day), and survival. RESULTS: During the study period an increasing number of patients were prescribed LTOT in connection with discharge after hospitalisation for an exacerbation (1995 vs. 2000: 74.4% vs. 82.2%, P<0.001), were prescribed oxygen 15-24h/day (66.2% vs. 85.5%, P<0.001), had delivered oxygen concentrator or liquid oxygen (77.8% vs. 96.9%, P<0.001), and had mobile oxygen (29.9% vs. 42.8%, P<0.001). Only 65.8% of the patients were followed-up in an outpatient clinic with the possibility of re-evaluation of the criteria for LTOT and adjustment for oxygen flow, with no change during the study period (P=0.43). In a representative subsample, 77.1% had smoking habits or measurement of CO-level registered in 1995 compared to 79.6% in year 2000 (P=0.65), and 25.1% vs. 21.2% (P=0.34) were considered current smokers. The median survival increased from 1.07 to 1.40 years (P=0.032). CONCLUSIONS: Adherence to guidelines for LTOT has improved concerning administration of oxygen, but has remained poor concerning follow-up of the patients and smoking cessation. Survival of COPD patients on LTOT has improved during the observation period.",
author = "Ringb{\ae}k, {Thomas J{\o}rgen} and Peter Lange",
year = "2006",
language = "English",
volume = "100",
pages = "218--25",
journal = "Respiratory Medicine",
issn = "0954-6111",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impact of the Danish Oxygen Register on adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy in COPD patients.

AU - Ringbæk, Thomas Jørgen

AU - Lange, Peter

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of The Danish Oxygen Register on COPD patients' treatment modalities, survival, and adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT). DESIGN: The Danish Oxygen Register. SUBJECTS: 8487 COPD patients who received LTOT in the study period from November 1, 1994, to December 31, 2000. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Follow-up, smoking status, correct prescription of LTOT (15-24h/day), and survival. RESULTS: During the study period an increasing number of patients were prescribed LTOT in connection with discharge after hospitalisation for an exacerbation (1995 vs. 2000: 74.4% vs. 82.2%, P<0.001), were prescribed oxygen 15-24h/day (66.2% vs. 85.5%, P<0.001), had delivered oxygen concentrator or liquid oxygen (77.8% vs. 96.9%, P<0.001), and had mobile oxygen (29.9% vs. 42.8%, P<0.001). Only 65.8% of the patients were followed-up in an outpatient clinic with the possibility of re-evaluation of the criteria for LTOT and adjustment for oxygen flow, with no change during the study period (P=0.43). In a representative subsample, 77.1% had smoking habits or measurement of CO-level registered in 1995 compared to 79.6% in year 2000 (P=0.65), and 25.1% vs. 21.2% (P=0.34) were considered current smokers. The median survival increased from 1.07 to 1.40 years (P=0.032). CONCLUSIONS: Adherence to guidelines for LTOT has improved concerning administration of oxygen, but has remained poor concerning follow-up of the patients and smoking cessation. Survival of COPD patients on LTOT has improved during the observation period.

AB - OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of The Danish Oxygen Register on COPD patients' treatment modalities, survival, and adherence to guidelines for long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT). DESIGN: The Danish Oxygen Register. SUBJECTS: 8487 COPD patients who received LTOT in the study period from November 1, 1994, to December 31, 2000. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Follow-up, smoking status, correct prescription of LTOT (15-24h/day), and survival. RESULTS: During the study period an increasing number of patients were prescribed LTOT in connection with discharge after hospitalisation for an exacerbation (1995 vs. 2000: 74.4% vs. 82.2%, P<0.001), were prescribed oxygen 15-24h/day (66.2% vs. 85.5%, P<0.001), had delivered oxygen concentrator or liquid oxygen (77.8% vs. 96.9%, P<0.001), and had mobile oxygen (29.9% vs. 42.8%, P<0.001). Only 65.8% of the patients were followed-up in an outpatient clinic with the possibility of re-evaluation of the criteria for LTOT and adjustment for oxygen flow, with no change during the study period (P=0.43). In a representative subsample, 77.1% had smoking habits or measurement of CO-level registered in 1995 compared to 79.6% in year 2000 (P=0.65), and 25.1% vs. 21.2% (P=0.34) were considered current smokers. The median survival increased from 1.07 to 1.40 years (P=0.032). CONCLUSIONS: Adherence to guidelines for LTOT has improved concerning administration of oxygen, but has remained poor concerning follow-up of the patients and smoking cessation. Survival of COPD patients on LTOT has improved during the observation period.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 100

SP - 218

EP - 225

JO - Respiratory Medicine

JF - Respiratory Medicine

SN - 0954-6111

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 34121281