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Page 36

Notes:

allied

academies

August 27-28, 2018 | London, UK

International Conference on

Healthcare and Health Management

Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery

Joint Event

&

Journal of Public Health Policy and Planning | Volume: 2

Association among COPD assessment test, Protein intake, and Subjective Diet-related quality of life

scale scores in Patients with stable Chronic respiratory disease

Marie Saito

1,2

, Hiroko Tadaura

2

, Teruyuki Nakayama

2

, Yumi Kaneko

3

and

Nozomi Yamazaki

3

1

Jikei Nursing School, Japan

2

International University of Health and Welfare, Japan

3

The Jikei University School of Medicine, Japan

Aim:

This study aimed to clarify the associations among the

scores on the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)

assessment test (CAT), protein intake, and Subjective Diet-

related Quality of Life (SDQOL) scale in patients with stable

chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Methods:

Outpatients aged 30~90 years in the Department of

Respiratory Medicine in a hospital, who were diagnosed with

COPD at the first diagnosis, were retrospectively reviewed using

the brief dietary history questionnaire (BDHQ); CAT, SDQOL

scale, respiratory function test, and blood test were analyzed

using SPSS Ver.25.

Results:

From 10,513 patients diagnosed with COPD at the

first diagnosis, 98 patients (COPD, ACO, BA) with stable chronic

obstructive pulmonary disease, who consented to participate

and were selected by exclusion criteria, were investigated.

Comparison between two groups of CAT shows significant

difference in disease name, mMRC, treatment for infections

in the last month, body height, body weight, estimated energy

requirement, energy intake, carbohydrate, vitamin D, grains,

and SDQOL using Mann-Whitney U test and χ−square test.

In the multiple logistic regression analysis (variable increase

method), CAT and protein intake affected SDQOL (odds ratio

[95% confidence interval], CAT: 1.089 [1.026-1.156] p = 0.005,

protein: 0.977 [0.961- 0.994] p = 0.008).

Conclusion:

CAT, protein intake, and SDQOL were associated in

patients with stable chronic respiratory disease. The disease-

specific QOL evaluation scale, protein intake, and the SDQOL

scale could be related in terms of their assessment of patients

with stable chronic respiratory disease.

Ethics and Dissemination:

Ethical approval has been granted by

Ethics Committees of the hospital and International University

Health and Welfare (Ref:16-Ig-92, Ref:28-271 (8514)).

Speaker Biography

Marie Saito is enrolled in the doctoral course of International University of Health and

Welfaregraduateschoolofnursing,JapanandisworkingasateacherofaJikeinursingschool.

e:

rie2545ma@outlook.jp