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Primary Care Respiratory Journal
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The role of the practice nurse in the management of asthma
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  • Brief Communication
  • Published: December 2001

The role of the practice nurse in the management of asthma

  • Rupert C M Jones1,
  • Sam Freegard,
  • Mark Reeves,
  • Karen Hanney &
  • …
  • Frank Dobbs 

Primary Care Respiratory Journal volume 10, pages 109–111 (2001)Cite this article

  • 5026 Accesses

  • 5 Citations

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Abstract

Background

The role of the practice nurse may include diagnosis and management of asthma, this study examines the range of activities performed by nurses and their training.

Aims

To ascertain the role and confidence levels of the practice nurse in diagnosis and management of asthmatic patients.

Methods

A postal questionnaire sent to the named respiratory nurse in 179 practices in Cornwall and Southwest Devon, to assess the number of practice nurses offering asthma management, extent of services and confidence level of nurses in this role.

Results

The response rate was 64%: Dedicated asthma clinics operated in 47% of practices, 87% undertaken by the nurse alone. Responsibilities undertaken by nurses alone included: instruction of inhaler technique 93%, supervising self-management plans 87%, changing medication dosage 71%, withdrawing treatment 53%, diagnosing asthma 45% and managing acute exacerbations 29%. Nurses initiated treatment alone, without consulting a doctor, as follows; inhaled bronchodilators 55%, long acting bronchodilators 54%, inhaled steroids 56%, oral steroids 15%, anti-leukotrienes 5% and theophyllines 3%. The confidence level of the nurses performing these tasks was high. Formal training had been undertaken by 74% of respondents. There were statistically significant associations between performance of organisational tasks and training, but surprisingly no apparent statistical associations with training and independent initiation of treatments.

Conclusions

Practice nurses are performing activities previously undertaken by doctors. A minority have not had formal training and performing these activities, without well-defined shared care protocols, may be outside current legal frameworks.

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Author information

Authors and Affiliations

  1. Respiratory Research Unit Department of Primary Health Care & General Practice ITTC Building Tamar Science Park, , Derriford, 1 Davy Road, Plymouth

    Rupert C M Jones (General Practitioner)

Authors
  1. Rupert C M Jones
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  2. Sam Freegard
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  3. Mark Reeves
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  4. Karen Hanney
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  5. Frank Dobbs
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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Rupert C M Jones.

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Cite this article

Jones, R., Freegard, S., Reeves, M. et al. The role of the practice nurse in the management of asthma. Prim Care Respir J 10, 109–111 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1038/pcrj.2001.41

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  • Received: 14 November 2001

  • Accepted: 20 November 2001

  • Issue date: December 2001

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/pcrj.2001.41

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This article is cited by

  • General practitioners with a special interest in respiratory medicine: national survey of UK primary care organisations

    • Hilary Pinnock
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    • Aziz Sheikh

    BMC Health Services Research (2005)

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Primary Care Respiratory Journal (Prim Care Respir J)

ISSN 1475-1534 (online)

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