Background Chronic breathlessness poses significant burden for individuals and healthcare systems. Effective symptom-directed approaches, such as breathing and relaxation techniques, require medical optimisation of the underlying long-term condition causing breathlessness. We previously identified nine, predominantly cardiorespiratory, long-term conditions contributing to the greatest burden of breathlessness in primary care. Aim Develop checklists to support primary care in delivering optimal, evidence-based management of conditions causing chronic breathlessness. Design & setting Synthesis of national guidance and stakeholder workshops, using a co-design approach. Method Desktop review of national guidance relating to management of each condition was synthesised as the basis for the checklists. Virtual workshops and interviews were conducted to further adapt checklist content with stakeholders (primary care staff, clinical specialists and representatives from national speciality groups). Workshops were recorded and facilitated by a qualitative researcher with clinical experience. Insights from workshop data were incorporated to produce draft checklists for verification by workshop participants. Checklist contents were refined and agreed in consultation with national specialist groups. Electronic patient record templates were developed to operationalise the checklists. Results Twenty-two national guidelines were reviewed and synthesised into the checklist drafts. Six virtual workshops and nine individual interviews were conducted with 30 key stakeholders (five GP, four nurses, six physiotherapists, three pharmacists, three dieticians, nine physicians). Participants directed the checklist format to include safety netting, key diagnostic checks and optimal management. Conclusion Short pragmatic evidence-based checklists were developed for use in primary care to support primary care clinicians in managing the main conditions contributing to chronic breathlessness.
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Gillian Doe
Simon Wathall
Kumaran Balasundaram
BJGP Open
University of Cambridge
Keele University
University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust
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Doe et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69ba430d4e9516ffd37a3e09 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3399/bjgpo.2025.0208
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