Helping Patients with COPD Transition from Hospital to Home—The BREATHE Study

BACKGROUND: The transition from hospital to home is a high-risk period for patients. One out of 5 patients suffers an adverse event shortly after discharge, with about one-third of events deemed preventable. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a leading cause of hospitalizations. Few interventional studies have focused on improving the hospital-to-home transition for patients with COPD. These patients have specific needs that are not the focus of general transitional care programs. For example, patients with COPD report needing information about COPD and how to manage it. About half lack the skills for proper inhaler use, and many do not know how to manage “breathlessness episodes” and detect early signs of acute exacerbations. OBJECTIVES: In the Better Respiratory Education and Treatment Help Empower (BREATHE) study, we proposed developing and evaluating a comprehensive patient- and family-centered transitional care program for patients who have COPD and their family caregivers. Specifically, we aimed to do the following: 1. Develop and pilot test a hospital-initiated, patient- and family-centered, 3-month transitional care intervention to empower and build the capacity of patients with COPD and their family caregivers and to improve their disease self-management, problem-solving, and coping skills. 2. Conduct a single-blinded randomized controlled trial (RCT) among 240 patients with COPD admitted to 1 academic medical center to test the effects of intervention compared with usual care on health-related quality of life (HRQOL), survival, and use of emergency department (ED) and hospital services. 3. Evaluate intervention impact on patient experience, activation, self-efficacy, and self-care behaviors. 4. Evaluate intervention process and impact on family-caregiver self-efficacy, stress, and coping skills. METHODS: In the study's initial phase, we co-developed the BREATHE transitional care program with patients who have COPD, family caregivers, and stakeholders. The BREATHE program was designed to facilitate the transition-to-home process and build the capacity of patients with COPD and their family caregivers to manage COPD at home. Given the complex needs of these patients, the program offers tailored services to both patients and family caregivers starting early during the hospital stay and continuing for 3 months postdischarge. The program includes tailored transition support to ensure that patients and family caregivers are prepared for discharge, individualized COPD self-management support, and facilitated access to community programs and treatment services. The program is delivered by COPD nurse transition guides on hospital transition teams who received special training on how to support patients with COPD and their families and used standardized tools to deliver the program. We tested the program in a single-blinded RCT at 1 academic community hospital in Baltimore, Maryland. Patients older than 40 years who were hospitalized because of a COPD exacerbation were enrolled and randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive either the BREATHE program intervention or usual care using a computer algorithm. Patients in the usual care arm received support from a general transition guide for 1 month postdischarge. Patients randomized to receive the BREATHE program intervention were offered the opportunity to invite a family caregiver, if available, to enroll with them in the study. Data collectors and outcomes assessors were blinded to the participants' arm allocation. We measured program effect on acute care utilization and HRQOL compared with usual transitional care services. The primary outcomes were the combined number of
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First added on: May 22, 2025