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2007 Massachusetts Guidelines for
Adult Diabetes Care Now
Available
HNE adopts guidelines relevant
to membership needs to promote preventive care and support management
of chronic health conditions. Each year, HNE distributes information
about Guidelines to physicians.
Guidelines are available at (http://hne.com/HNE_providers/preventive.html) as well as the physician-only secure web site, HNEDirect.
If you would like a paper copy of a Guideline, call the HNE Provider
Relations Department at 413-787-4000 or 800-842-4464, ext. 5000.
National
Asthma Guidelines Updated
From the NHLBI:
The National Asthma Education and Prevention
Program (NAEPP) issued the first comprehensive update in a decade of
clinical guidelines for the diagnosis and management of asthma. The
guidelines emphasize the importance of asthma control and introduce
new approaches for monitoring asthma. Updated recommendations for managing
asthma include an expanded section on childhood asthma (with an additional
age group), new guidance on medications, new recommendations on
patient education in settings beyond the physician's office, and new
advice for controlling environmental factors that can cause asthma symptoms.
Coordinated by the National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health, NAEPP
convenes an expert panel when there is sufficient science to warrant
a rigorous, systematic review of the published medical literature to
ensure that the asthma guidelines reflect the latest scientific advances.
"The goal of asthma therapy is to
control asthma so that patients can live active, full lives while minimizing
their risk of asthma exacerbations and other problems," notes William
W. Busse, M.D., chairman of the Expert Panel, and chairman of the University
of Wisconsin Department of Medicine.
Expert Panel Report 3 (EPR-3): Guidelines
for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma - Full Report, 2007 provides
new guidance for selecting treatment based on a patient's individual
needs and level of asthma control. The guidelines emphasize that, while
asthma can be controlled, the condition can change over time and differs
among individuals and by age groups. Thus, it is important to monitor
regularly the patient's level of asthma control so that treatment can
be adjusted as needed.
EPR-3 builds upon complete asthma guidelines
issued in 1991 and 1997 and an update on selected topics released in
2002. The guidelines focus on four components of asthma care: measures
to assess and monitor asthma, patient education, control of environmental
factors and other conditions that can worsen asthma, and medications.
Key features and changes to these
four components of asthma care include:
- Assessment and Monitoring: EPR-3 takes a new approach to assessing and monitoring asthma by using
multiple measures of the patient's level of current impairment (frequency
and intensity of symptoms, low lung function, and limitations of daily
activities) and future risk (risk of exacerbations, progressive loss
of lung function, or adverse side effects from medications). The
guidelines stress that some patients can still be at high risk for frequent
exacerbations even if they have few day-to-day effects of asthma.
- Patient Education: EPR-3 confirms
the importance of teaching patients skills to self-monitor and manage
asthma and to use a written asthma action plan, which should include
instructions for daily treatment and ways to recognize and handle worsening
asthma. New recommendations encourage expanding educational opportunities
to reach patients in a variety of settings, such as pharmacies, schools,
community centers, and patients' homes.
A new section addresses the need for
clinician education programs to improve communications with patients
and to use system-wide approaches for integrating the guidelines into health
care practice.
- Control of environmental factors
and other conditions that can affect asthma: EPR-3 describes new
evidence for using multiple approaches to limit exposure to allergens
and other substances that can worsen asthma; research shows that single
steps are rarely sufficient. EPR-3 also expands the section on other
common conditions that asthma patients can have and notes that treating
chronic problems, such as rhinitis and sinusitis, gastroesophageal reflux,
overweight or obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, stress, and depression
may help improve asthma control.
- Medications: EPR-3 continues
the use of a step-wise approach to control asthma, in which medication
doses or types are stepped up as needed and stepped down when possible.
Treatment is adjusted based on the level of asthma control.
The step-wise asthma management charts
are revised and expanded to specify treatment for three age groups:
0-4 years, 5-11 years, and 12 years and older. The 5-11 age group
was added (earlier guidelines combined this group with adults) as a
result of new evidence on medications for this age group, and emerging
evidence that suggests that children may respond differently than adults
to asthma medications.
Recommendations on medications are updated
to reflect the latest evidence on effectiveness and safety. EPR-3
reaffirms that patients with persistent asthma (e.g., patients who have
symptoms more than twice a week during the day or more than twice a
month at night) need both long-term control medications to control asthma
and prevent exacerbations, as well as quick relief medications for symptoms
as needed. EPR-3 also reaffirms that inhaled corticosteroids are
the most effective long-term control medication across all age groups.
EPR-3 includes new recommendations on treatment options such as leukotriene
receptor antagonists and cromolyn for long term control; long acting
beta agonists as adjunct therapy with inhaled corticosteroids; omalizumab
for severe asthma; and albuterol, levalbuterol, and corticosteroids
for acute exacerbations.
EPR-3 also describes areas of current
research to improve asthma management, such as new ways for monitoring
asthma control (for example, tests using a patient's sputum and exhaled
air), and tailoring treatment based on the particular characteristics
of a patient's asthma and the patient's genetic makeup.
NAEPP is developing tools and partnerships
to improve adoption of the guidelines, including a Summary Report of
EPR-3 to be released October 17. An NAEPP-appointed independent panel
of experts and guideline end-users is developing an action plan to improve
guidelines implementation.
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