Extract In many people with chronic respiratory diseases, breathlessness (dyspnoea) occurs at normal day-to-day exertion, despite optimal treatment of their underlying diseases [1]. It is disabling, and is associated with worse self-rated health, care dependency, worse physical and mental quality of life, decreased social life, anxiety, depression, unplanned healthcare use and poorer prognosis [2 - 4].
European Respiratory Journal published a clinical update in Critical Care on 05 Mar 2026.
The item focuses on The complexity of outcome assessment in trials of symptomatic management for people living with persistent breathlessness: challenges and opportunities.
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