Guest guest Posted May 23, 2006 Report Share Posted May 23, 2006 Press Release Source: World Allergy Organization New Global Asthma Survey Reveals Serious Communication and Treatment Barriers Between U.S. Physicians and Patients Monday May 22, 11:15 am ET Communication Gaps Lead to Lack of Patient Understanding about Asthma and Medication Side Effects http://biz./prnews/060522/nym027.html?.v=50 SAN DIEGO, May 22 /PRNewswire/ -- Today alarming United States (U.S.) findings from the adult arm of the Global Asthma Physician and Patient (GAPP) Survey were unveiled at the 101st International Conference of the American Thoracic Society, highlighting significant disconnects between physician and patient assessments on issues that affect health outcomes, including medication side effects, patient education and physician-patient communication. The GAPP Survey, conducted among 3,459 adult respondents globally in 16 countries, is the first-ever global quantitative survey to ask physicians and patients similar questions in an effort to illuminate serious discrepancies and examine asthma attitudes and treatment practices between physicians and patients. ADVERTISEMENT " Our findings from the GAPP Survey affirm that current methods for treating asthma are unsatisfactory, " stated S. Blaiss, MD, University of Tennessee Health and Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee, for the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. " The key to treating chronic conditions such as asthma is to enhance patient treatment compliance through better patient education, increase communication among physicians and patients, and improve treatment options. " The GAPP Survey adult findings highlight a marked disconnect between physician and patient perception of asthma management, unveil key barriers to optimal asthma management and identify limitations of currently available asthma medications. " These findings reveal significant unmet needs in the asthma treatment category, " said A. Kaliner, MD, Institute for Asthma & Allergy, Chevy Chase, MD, USA, president of the World Allergy Organization. " In the area of short-term side effects, results reveal inconsistencies between the perceptions of physicians, and patients diagnosed with asthma. In many cases, patients are not able to identify these side effects. Better education and new treatments may address some of the issues raised in this survey, and potentially improve patient outcomes. " Side Effects Impact Treatment Compliance and Health Outcomes When patients do recognize asthma medication side effects, a lack of treatment compliance is often the consequence. One quarter (25%) of patients who have experienced at least one side effect have switched medications, and a comparable proportion have discontinued treatment (22%), skipped doses (19%), and changed dosage (26%). Lack of compliance can be dangerous and greatly impact health outcomes. Patients who are not compliant with their asthma treatment all the time experience at least one of the following: increased symptoms (69%), limited physical activity (58%), increased use of rescue medication (46%), nighttime awakenings (39%), and more frequent asthma attacks or exacerbations (35%). Additionally, consequences of treatment non-compliance increase resource utilization with more physician visits (25%) and more hospitalizations or emergency room visits (13%). Physicians and patients with asthma differ in estimates of treatment compliance. While more than a third (35%) of patients report that they comply with their physician's treatment instructions all of the time, no physicians believe this to be true of their patients; furthermore, almost all (97%) physicians say they know their patients are not complying with treatment instructions because they ask, because their symptoms are not controlled (89%), or their patients (88%) tell them. Physician-Patient Communication Gap Hinders Education and Understanding The findings highlight a disparity between actual patient awareness of asthma medication side effects, and physician estimates of patient awareness. One-third (36%) of patients experienced short- term side effects, such as hoarseness, fungal infections in the mouth, or sore throat. Interestingly, 19% of patients say they are not aware of these short-term side effects; yet only 5% of physicians who prescribe these treatments believe patients are unaware. Patients' limited knowledge of side effects may be attributable to a communication gap between physicians and themselves. An overwhelming majority (73% for short-term side effects) of patients who are currently or have ever taken asthma medication report rarely or never discussing side effects with their physician. Conversely, most (90%) physicians say they sometimes or always discuss short-term side effects. Although a majority (62%) of patients say they initiate these discussions, over two-thirds (86%) of physicians affirm that they do. Moreover, perceptions of in-office patient education vary between physicians and patients. While 38% of patients report that no time during office visits is spent discussing techniques for successful asthma management, most (90%) physicians say that up to half of a typical visit is spent on such conversations. Physicians and Patients Agree: There Is a Need for New Asthma Treatments Although physician and patient assessments of asthma management differ, they do agree that currently available asthma treatments are less than ideal. Nearly all (95%) physicians believe that inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) are the " gold standard " for asthma treatment. Surprisingly, nearly half (47%) of physicians consider prescribing long acting beta-agonists (LABA) and a majority (62%) consider prescribing combination medications (ICS + LABA) as first-line treatment for patients with mild persistent asthma. According to the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) guidelines, low- dose glucocorticosteroid mono-therapy is the recommended first-line treatment for adult patients with mild persistent asthma.(1) A recent public health advisory, announced due to increased death rates, from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)(2) reemphasizes that long-acting beta2 adrenergic agonists should not be the first treatment physicians prescribe for patients with asthma, and should be added to treatment only when patients do not adequately respond to other asthma medications. A majority (79%) of physicians believe there are unmet needs in the ICS treatment category. Among key ICS attributes such as efficacy and convenience, physicians report lowest satisfaction with side effect issues, including local and systemic side effects.(3) Furthermore, most (76%) patients would welcome new asthma treatment options. Patients also report comparable efficacy and an improved side effect profile to be the most vital medication attributes. Please visit http://www.gappsurvey.org for further information on the GAPP Survey. About the GAPP Survey Advisory Board The GAPP Survey advisory board is comprised of the following professional organizations: * World Allergy Organization The World Allergy Organization (WAO) is an international umbrella organization whose members consist of 74 regional and national allergology, asthma, and clinical immunology societies from around the world. By collaborating with member societies, WAO provides direct educational outreach programs, symposia and lectureships to members in 92 countries. The organization was founded in 1951 and has successfully organized 18 major congresses. * American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology The American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology (ACAAI) organization is a U.S. professional association of 4,900 allergists/immunologists established in 1942. ACAAI is dedicated to improving the quality of patient care in allergy and immunology through research, advocacy and professional and public education. The GAPP Survey Working Group * S. Blaiss, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN, USA, for the American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology * E. Baena-Cagnani, Catholic University of Cordoba, Cordoba, Argentina, for the World Allergy Organization * G. Walter Canonica, University of Genova DIMI, Genova, Italy, for the World Allergy Organization * Dahl, Aarhus University Hospital, Department of Respiratory Diseases, Aarhus, Denmark, for the World Allergy Organization * A. Kaliner, Institute for Asthma & Allergy, Chevy Chase, MD, USA, for the World Allergy Organization * Erkka J. Valovirta, Turku Allergy Center, Turku, Finland, for the World Allergy Organization The GAPP Survey was underwritten by a grant from ALTANA Pharma. Study Design/Methodology Interactive® conducted the survey on behalf of the GAPP Survey Advisory Board via 3,459 online, telephone and face-to-face interviews between May 18 and August 24, 2005. A total of 5,482 physicians at patients were interviewed globally: 1,726 adults age 18+ who have been diagnosed with asthma and 1,733 generalist or specialist physicians who treat adults were surveyed in 16 countries (Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, The Netherlands, Poland, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States); 2,023 interviews were conducted through the pediatric arm of the survey. Sample sizes for each country were about 100 for both patients and physicians, except for in the U.S. where the sample sizes were about 200 for each group. Specifically, in the U.S. 208 patients and 224 physicians were surveyed. Physicians surveyed had to meet the following criteria: currently practicing medicine for 3-30 years, sees at least three adult asthma patients per week, writes at least one prescription for asthma medications per week. Generalists include family practitioners, general practitioners and internal medicine practitioners, and specialists include allergists, pulmonologists and respirologists. The U.S. data were the only data weighted. Physician data were weighted by physician specialty, gender and years in practice to reflect the characteristics of physicians in the master file of physicians in the American Medical Association. Patient data were weighted by gender, education, age, household, income and region to reflect the characteristics of adult asthma patients from the National Health Interview. Data from the other countries surveyed were not weighted. With probability samples of this size, there is a 95% certainty that the overall patient results have a sampling error of plus or minus 2 percentage points and the overall physician results have a sampling error of plus or minus 2 percentage points. Sampling error for the U.S. patient and physician samples is plus or minus 10 percentage points. This online sample is not a probability sample. About Asthma Asthma is a chronic lung disease caused by airway inflammation and results in airway obstruction in response to certain stimuli. Allergy is responsible for more than 50% of asthma in adults. Atopic individuals -- those who have a personal or familial tendency to become sensitized and produce IgE antibodies to allergens -- frequently experience more than one allergic disease, and allergic rhinitis, allergic conjunctivitis and atopic eczema frequently co- exist with allergic asthma. It is characterized by a variety of symptoms including wheezing, coughing and a tightening of the airways, which causes shortness of breath and can be life- threatening. According to the Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA), more than 300 million people worldwide patients have asthma and the prevalence is growing by approximately 50% every decade.(4) Worldwide deaths from asthma total more than 180,000 annually. In the U.S., approximately 20 million Americans have asthma and more than 5000 deaths each year can be attributed to the disease.(5) About Interactive® Interactive Inc. (http://www.harrisinteractive.com), based in Rochester, New York, is the 13th largest and the fastest-growing market research firm in the world, most widely known for The Poll® and for its pioneering leadership in the online market research industry. Long recognized by its clients for delivering insights that enable confident business decisions, the Company blends the science of innovative research with the art of strategic consulting to deliver knowledge that leads to measurable and enduring value. Interactive serves clients worldwide through its United States, Europe (http://www.harrisinteractive.com/europe) and Asia offices, its wholly-owned subsidiary Novatris in Paris, France (http://www.novatris.com), and through an independent global network of affiliate market research companies. (1) GINA ''Pocket Guide for Asthma Management and Prevention,'' 2005. Available at: http://www.ginasthma.com/Guidelineitem.asp?? l1=2 & l2=1 & intId=37 Accessed on April 20, 2006. (2) United States Food and Drug Administration. ''Long Acting Beta Agonists Advisory.'' November 2005. Available at http://www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/LABA/default.htm. Accessed February 7, 2006. (3) Average responses of 6.4 and 7.1, respectively, based on a scale of one to ten (4) World Health Organization: ''Bronchial asthma.'' Available at: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs206. Accessed January 13, 2006. (5) Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America: ''Asthma facts and figures.'' Available at http://www.aafa.org/display.cfm? id=8 & sub=42. Accessed April 25, 2006 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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