Narrative medicine to improve the management and quality of life of patients with COPD: the first experience applying parallel chart in Italy

Poor adherence to therapy and the failure of current smoking cessation programs demonstrate that the current management of COPD can be improved, and it is necessary to educate physicians about new approaches for taking care of patients. Parallel chart is a narrative medicine tool that improves the d...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease 2018-01, Vol.13, p.287-297
Hauptverfasser: Banfi, Paolo, Cappuccio, Antonietta, Latella, Maura E, Reale, Luigi, Muscianisi, Elisa, Marini, Maria Giulia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Poor adherence to therapy and the failure of current smoking cessation programs demonstrate that the current management of COPD can be improved, and it is necessary to educate physicians about new approaches for taking care of patients. Parallel chart is a narrative medicine tool that improves the doctor-patient relationship by asking physicians to write about their patients' lives, thereby encouraging reflective thoughts on care. Between October 2015 and March 2016, 50 Italian pulmonologists were involved in the collection of parallel charts of anonymous patients with COPD. The narratives were analyzed according to the Grounded Theory methodology. In the 243 parallel charts collected, the patients (mean age 69 years, 68% men) are described as still active and as a resource for their families (71%). The doctor-patient relationship started as difficult in 50% of cases, and younger age and smoking were the main risk factors. The conversations turned positive in 78% of narratives, displaying deeper mutual knowledge, trust for the clinicians' ability to establish effective therapy (92%), support efforts to quit smoking (63%), or restore patients' activities (78%). All the physicians concurred that the adoption of innovative parallel charts was useful for improving clinical care and worthy of official inclusion in protocols for the management of COPD.
ISSN:1178-2005
1176-9106
1178-2005
DOI:10.2147/COPD.S148685