Introduction: This study aims to explore the perspectives of patients and carers with chronic breathlessness on current provision of care, care expectations, and self-management needs to develop relevant health services and resources to improve clinical outcomes.
Methods: In-depth semistructured interviews were conducted on patients living with chronic breathlessness and carers.
Results: Thirteen patients (cardiac, respiratory, and noncardiorespiratory) and two carers were interviewed (mean age 57 years, 47% female, median duration with breathlessness 5 years). Four main themes were identified: (1) living with breathlessness, (2) diagnosis delays, misdiagnosis, and knowledge gaps, (3) beyond curing disease: symptom relief and improving quality of life, and (4) self-management and limited support for it.
Conclusion: Breathlessness has a high personal impact but remains a neglected condition in Australia. Patients suffer from lack of personal, community, and provider awareness, discontinuity of care, and too few clinical and self-management options.
Keywords: chronic obstructive; dyspnoea; heart failure; lung neoplasms; multimorbidity; patient-centred care; pulmonary disease; self-management.
© 2023 The Authors. The Clinical Respiratory Journal published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.