GEP Medicine in Society Guide 2022/23
GEP Medicine in Society Guide
6. Themed Days - Primary Care
6.8. Respiratory disease
Preparatory work
In preparation students should have reviewed the following resources;
- The British Thoracic Society has lots of useful resources e.g. clinical guidelines for respiratory conditions.
- The British Lung Foundation website has details of different respiratory conditions, UK statistics for lung disease and an excellent section where you can get a patient’s perspective on COPD by reading and watching the stories of people who live with and have experienced COPD.
- The Asthma UK website also has useful resources e.g. asthma action plans.
- The BMJ Best Practice on Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a comprehensive and free online resource that covers various aspects of COVID-19, including epidemiology, diagnosis, management and follow up.
Aims
To introduce students to respiratory illness, its impact on patients, society and the practice workload; and to introduce students to health promotion measures designed to improve respiratory health. To consider the changes and challenges in assessing and managing respiratory conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Learning outcomes
By the end of the day students should be able to:
- List common respiratory illnesses in children and adults that are seen in primary care
- Describe the basic assessment of a child with an upper respiratory tract illness (URTI)
- Describe and reflect on the impact of chronic respiratory disease from a patient’s perspective, focusing on the issues of loss of function, autonomy, and well-being and its impact on daily life
- Outline the health promotion interventions, including smoking cessation interventions, provided by the practice team to prevent or manage respiratory illness
- Demonstrate a basic examination of the respiratory system
- Demonstrate the measurement and interpretation of peak expiratory flow
Example timetable
9.30 – 10.30 | Tutorial on respiratory illnesses
|
10.30 – 10.45
| Tea break |
10.45 – 11.45 | Prepare for patient encounters · Plan questions and observations
Patient encounters · Some students can sit in on a clinic with GP/practice nurse · Other students to interview patient/s with a respiratory condition
|
11.45 – 12.45
| Students feedback to group on what their patient encounters and group discussion
|
12.45 – 13.45 | Lunch
|
13.45– 15.00 | Teaching session with practice nurse about peak flow and spirometry measurement
Followed by breakout tasks; students work in pairs/small groups for case studies using peak flow and spirometry measurements
Includes tea break
|
15.00 – 16.00 | Group debriefs on cases Set homework for next session
|
Suggested Activities
- Tutorial on respiratory illnesses – could include brainstorm of common respiratory symptoms presenting in primary care, long term respiratory diseases and their impact on patients and the practice team’s workload, students presenting pre-agreed topics based around preparatory work, ‘hot topics’ e.g. COVID-19.
- Sit in on a routine clinic with a member of the primary care team and observe particularly respiratory presentations, including acute and chronic symptoms, long term condition management e.g. asthma checks, health promotion activities e.g. flu jabs.
- Interview a patient with a respiratory condition.
- Teaching session with practice nurse to demonstrate spirometry and/or peak flow measurement (NB-there are lots of videos of this if no one can deliver the teaching session) and/or case studies interpreting peak flow and spirometry results.
- Introduction to examination of the respiratory system, adults and/or children, and to what extent this has changed due to COVID-19 e.g. remote assessment. This video from eGPlearning considers the respiratory exam by video consultation
Questions for students to consider
- If you met a patient with COPD or asthma– how did they describe their life, what did they find most difficult, did they see themselves as ill?
- Did you see or discuss acute respiratory illnesses? How did this impact on the GP’s workload? Should patients do more to self-manage minor illness? How can healthcare professionals support them to do this?
- How has COVID-19 changed how acute respiratory symptoms are assessed and managed?
- How has COVID-19 affected people with chronic lung disease?