viernes, 17 de octubre de 2008

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jueves, 16 de octubre de 2008

ARTÍCULO EN SALUD PANAMÁ

Congestión pulmonar: ¿Es la terapia respiratoria efectiva?
SALUDpanama.com - Thursday, 16 de October de 2008

viernes, 10 de octubre de 2008

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DEJAR DE FUMAR: ¿DIFÍCIL DESICIÓN?

Lic. Diana Lucía Agudelo U. RT. diluagu@yahoo.com


“QUIERO DEJAR DE FUMAR”, ésta frase tan anhelada para la mayoría de los fumadores, es también una decisión que acarrea miedo y mucha responsabilidad. Los motivos son tantos, que la mayoría decide dejar de fumar para su propio bienestar, porque se van dando cuenta de las anormalidades que surgen en su cuerpo debido al tabaco, por presión social o familiar. Otras, con el solo hecho de terminar con la dependencia y la necesidad de placer que este produce.
Hoy en día, nos encontramos en condiciones de entender la naturaleza del mal del tabaquismo en la sociedad, es por ésta razón que aumentan las leyes, las campañas, charlas y todo lo que se utiliza para luchar contra este dañino hábito, pero en ocasiones se tornan difíciles de realizar o llegar a su objetivo final.
Actualmente, en todo el mundo, muchos fumadores están dejando de fumar. Debido a esto, las compañías de productos, y las casas farmacéuticas emiten campañas con diversas ayudas, ya sean de venta libre o según receta médica, para lograr éste anhelado fin. Y vienen múltiples cuestionamientos por parte de las personas en cuánto que método utilizar y cuál es el más efectivo. Es por éste motivo, que algunas logran el cese total, o en su defecto nunca lo llegan a lograr, por varias consecuencias. La principal y la más temida de todas, la dependencia a la nicotina, la causante de la adicción, el síndrome de abstinencia, el cual lleva a desistir del tratamiento. Otros, por falta de una asesoría adecuada, temor en dejar su única compañía, resguardo en momentos de estrés o problemas personales o por simple placer.
Los métodos utilizados varían de un fumador a otro; mencionando algunos, solo con fuerza de voluntad o por la religión, ayuda por especialistas con medicamentos que inhiben el trastorno ansioso, psicoterapia, fumadores anónimos, Acupuntura, Terapia de láser, Hipnosis, terapias combinadas, la Rehabilitación Respiratoria del Fumador y la terapia de reemplazo de la nicotina, entre las cuales se encuentran desde chicles o goma de mascar, parches, inhaladores nasales, cremas, y los últimos avances, las píldoras. Pero nos seguimos preguntando, cuál elegir?
Según los expertos, lo más recomendable es la terapia de reemplazo de la nicotina, ya que actúa sobre el síndrome de abstinencia (dolores de cabeza, ansiedad, cambio de humor, deseos de comer, entre otros). Ésta terapia, se encuentra de venta libre en Panamá. Incluye, los chicles o goma de mascar y los parches. Ambos liberan nicotina de distintas formas. La diferencia radica principalmente en que la goma de mascar, sustituye al cigarrillo y brinda satisfacción de tener algo en la boca; mientras que el parche es transdérmico, no se siente y libera continuamente nicotina en bajas concentraciones.
La terapia de reemplazo de la nicotina tiene tres funciones: desde La Cesación total en el consumo de cigarrillos; Cesación parcial en los viajes largos y espacios prohibidos y la Disminución en el consumo de cigarrillos. El tratamiento puede tener una duración desde 3 meses hasta 9 meses, según el grado de dependencia en que se encuentre la persona el cual debe ser medido por test especiales.
Dando una mejor explicación, en el caso de los chicles es diferente, ya que puede tomar un poco más de tiempo el dejar de fumar o incluso abortar la terapia, ya que no ven resultados inmediatos por la falta de educación o explicación en la forma de uso, pues debe consumirse uno cada vez que se presente el deseo de fumar, a su vez, que tiene su propia técnica de consumo.
Los parches se colocan en un área del cuerpo libre de vellosidades y se deja actuar. La duración es de 16 horas aproximadamente, y se encuentran presentaciones de 15mg, 10mg y 5mg, por éste motivo debe existir una asesoría previa y constante durante el proceso.

Pero ¡Ojo! estas ayudas no son mágicas. Depende de la fuerza de voluntad, y la seguridad de querer dejar de fumar. De lo contrario nada dará resultado. Es importante seguir siempre las indicaciones y realizar el tratamiento completo. A la vez que contar con el apoyo familiar y el de su entorno social.
Para esto, se están creando a nivel nacional e internacional, las clínicas de cesación, o programas integrales multidisciplinarios para dejar de fumar, por medio de terapias grupales o individuales, siempre guíadas por personal del área de la salud especialistas en adicciones o con formación en ésta. Donde se aborda, desde la adicción, prevención hacia futuras enfermedades crónicas pulmonares, rehabilitación de su capacidad ventilatoria y devolver la calidad de vida. Estos programas son importantes para una recuperación total o parcial de las personas fumadoras. Recuerde que lo más importante es consultar con un especialista para que estudie su grado de adicción al cigarrillo, y le recete un tratamiento de acuerdo con sus necesidades. ¡No lo piense más y dele un respiro de vida a sus pulmones!

“No existe ninguna fórmula mágica para dejar de fumar. El abandono del tabaco implica un esfuerzo personal y que requiere tiempo y una firme decisión”

THE FUTURE OF THE RESPIRATORY THERAPIST

http://respiratory-care-manager.advanceweb.com/Article/The-Future-of-Respiratory-Therapy.aspx



By Michael Gibbons
Thanks to the widespread adoption of therapist-driven protocols, respiratory therapists have evolved from task-doers to well-educated critical thinkers, making decisions formerly reserved for physicians alone.
That growth is far from over, leaders in the field believe. Five of them shared their vision of RTs in the future.
As the demand for RTs increases, their advancement as clinicians will follow naturally, said David C. Shelledy, PhD, RRT, FAARC, who helmed the American Association for Respiratory Care in 2003.
"I think we need to be thinking about the RT as a physician extender," Dr. Shelledy said. "That's another way of saying cardiopulmonary physician assistant, someone who can develop and apply care plans and advanced protocols."
Reining in Misallocation of ServicesProtocol-based respiratory care will increase as the population ages and as hospitals continue to lose money by misallocating a significant amount of respiratory care services, said Dr. Shelledy, now associate dean for academic and student affairs for the College of Health Related Professions, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock.
"Some studies indicate that up to 40 percent of respiratory care is misallocated," he said. "We need to have RTs doing patient assessment and care plan development based on approved protocols."
Ohio's famous Cleveland Clinic was among the first hospitals to chisel out the field's future by creating and using evidence-based respiratory therapist-driven care protocols.
Back in 1992, Cleveland Clinic developed an RC consult service that uses sign- and symptom-based branching logic algorithms for administering aerosol therapy, bronchopulmonary hygiene, hyperinflation techniques, oxygen therapy, and other services.
What drove Cleveland Clinic to develop a respiratory care consult service "was the realization of a misallocation problem, that some patients not only here but elsewhere we're getting treatments that wouldn't benefit them, and others were not getting respiratory treatments they needed," said James Stoller, MD, head of the section of respiratory therapy in the department of pulmonary, allergy and critical care medicine at Cleveland Clinic.
"The vision of a consult service was the realization that patients needed to have an RT see them, along with using evidence-based care algorithms to make appropriate decisions on patients' behalf, and not depending on the physician to make every recommendation," Dr. Stoller said. "Over the years, we've studied it and shown consistent findings. It enhances the allocation of RC services. Treatments that don't need to get done don't, and those that do, do."
Disease Management Specialists The road from "oxygen jockeys" to clinicians should lead to disease management specialists in the future, offered Garry Kauffman, MPA, CHE, RRT, an adjunct faculty member of the RT program at Harrisburg Area Community College, Pa.
"If you look back at where we started, we were primarily 'treaters,' IPPB, for example," he said. "We then added various diagnostics, pulmonary rehab, and began breaking out of the hospital into post-acute care and home care. The last iteration is to add disease management: prophylaxis, managing asthma, smoking cessation. The dream I have is to put all those together: to detect, treat, and manage."
That dream is still a ways off in many areas, though. RTs treat chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with bronchodilators and achieve short-term goals, but they're less involved than Kauffman would like with managing its chronic symptoms and with prevention, wellness, and disease management in general.
"We tend to continue to do the tasks and duties, but we're not really wrapped into the whole patient-care-and-management package in the way I'd hoped," he said. "We never will replace doctors and nurses, but we are the best qualified and the best educated to detect, treat, and manage lung disease."
Nor are therapist-driven protocols as widespread as Kauffman prefers, even though the science backing them up is irrefutable.
"We have seen an increase in respiratory care departments using TDPs, but we don't have as many as we should," he said. "RTs using TDPs have been documented as providing equal to or better patient outcomes at equal to or lower costs. Protocols really free up physicians from their historical roles to a new role in which they write an order for RTs to consult, develop, and implement a patient care plan to maximize patient care. It lets everyone work to their highest level of skill."
Rapid Response Team In the coming years, RTs should find themselves increasingly immersed in another emerging area of health care: the rapid response team.
Rapid response teams need one member adept at creating and maintaining a stable airway. Only RTs fill that role on the rapid evaluation team at Bridgeport Hospital, Bridgeport, Conn., which the hospital created to take part in the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's 100,000 Lives Campaign.
"On Oct. 1, we went live with the team," said Evelyn Tkacs Cimmino, RRT, RN, manager of respiratory therapy services and sleep medicine. "It's a real plus for the staff. The team consists of a critical care nurse, an RT, a medical resident, and some patient care technicians. The team is averaging about 20 calls a month."
To earn their place on the team, Cimmino wants all her staff members to complete Fundamental Critical Care Support certification, a credential sponsored by the Society of Critical Care Medicine. She's a big believer in RTs picking up extra credentials.
Cimmino insists her RTs have basic life support certification. She prefers them to also have Advanced Cardiac Life Support and Pediatric Advanced Life Support certification, plus Neonatal Resuscitation Program certification, a credential offered by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
"Critical care, that's where my focus is," she said. "I would love to see a level of 'critical care RCP.' I plug our staff as critical care therapists. They feel strongly that they could work anywhere once they work here."
'A Stepping-stone Career' Cimmino fairly erupts with ideas on where RTs can take their knowledge. She "absolutely" sees RTs securing a more prominent role in sleep medicine, helped along by last year's decision by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs to allow accredited respiratory care programs to offer a polysomnography certificate of completion option as an add-on to their existing programs.
"These days, everybody's into sleep," Cimmino said. "It's a nice feature for them to expand their role. Right now, they are limited in that role. Sleep labs are hiring LPNs and EEG techs because RTs are in short supply right now."
Several of Cimmino's staff members have moved on to become advanced registered nurse practitioners. They're qualified to perform nursing duties and to give physical exams, take patients' health history, order tests, and formulate care plans, she said.
Educating other providers on the basics of mechanical ventilation, up to and including medical residents, is another role Cimmino sees latent in her staff members.
"We will have a clinical educator to make sure our staff is competent, but also educate our physicians and our physician assistants," she said. "More RC departments will move in this direction, hiring people for use on competencies."
Lastly, what's stopping therapists from moving into the world of clinical trials to help drive the industry-wide crusade to establish evidence-based standards of care? "We could always use a group of RTs in research," Cimmino said. "Why do we have these new modes of ventilation? Who comes up with pressure release ventilation modes? When you read our clinical journals, how do you know if this is a good or a poorly designed trial? Research hopefully is something people will find interesting."
Respiratory care, she concluded, "can be a stepping-stone career."
Cessation Counselor With COPD, the fourth leading cause of death in America, claiming the lives of 122,283 Americans in 2003, smoking cessation offers yet another direction for RTs to grow.1
"The advantage for RTs is they are experts in respiratory disease," said Jonathan Foulds, PhD, who directs a program at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, that teaches RTs, nurses, doctors, dentists, mental health professionals, and others to become certified tobacco treatment specialists.
"They are trained clinicians so they know about treatments. And they have credibility with patients. Also, they routinely see patients with smoking-caused illnesses, so it comes naturally with their role."
The big question about smoking cessation as a career move, though, is funding. "There is no profession of smoking counselor right now," Dr. Foulds said. "For people to work in the field, which is the single most cost-effective intervention on the face of the planet besides child inoculation, we need to get funding."
Smoking cessation "is not integrated very well into mainstream health care," he continued. "HMOs have resisted increasing costs and not wanted to cover more treatments. That's the big thing one can never control. But all the evidence suggests that dollars are extremely well spent helping smokers quit. You prevent a lot of health care costs down the line."
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Yet another promising field for RTs that remains limited by funding is hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO). Never mind that the science behind hyperbarics dates to 1855. HBO is a hot new blip on medicine's radar screen, according to Kauffman, who's also administrative director of Hyperbaric, Wound Care, and Renal Services at Lancaster General, Lancaster, Pa.
"Respiratory therapists can and should be working in hyperbarics, both in the clinical and managerial roles," he said.
What holds RTs back from colonizing this new turf, however, is that until a few years ago, Medicare reimbursed for only a few clinical indications for HBO. Within the last three years, though, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has increased the list of indications to 14.
Ongoing research attests to its effectiveness in many other areas, including follow-up care for heart attack patients, Kauffman said.
"HBO services are sprouting up all around the country, presumably because awareness and reimbursement are no longer the obstacles they once were," he said. "As the list of clinical indications approved by CMS has grown, the commercial insurers are catching on."
RTs Throughout the Continuum of CareAlso, a shortage of funding, specifically Medicare reimbursement, is to blame for the profession's inability to gain traction in another field: home care. Cimmino hopes to see that change but isn't as sanguine on this prospect.
"I would really like to see insurance companies reimburse RTs for their services in the home," she said. "Visiting Nurse Associations do a lot of follow-up in home care but, if a patient has some pulmonary problem, the RT should be able to go out there, do the treatment, and get reimbursed."
As the U.S. population ages, the country will face a much greater need for long-term ventilatory support in extended-care facilities, Dr. Stoller added. "Right now, the evidence is sparse for RT roles in those areas," he said. "But I think there will be growth in those arenas: extended care facilities, sleep labs, rehab."
Reference 1. National Center for Health Statistics. Report of final mortality statistics, 2003. Michael Gibbons is senior associate editor of ADVANCE. He can be reached at mgibbons@merion.com.
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