National program to help keep COPD patients out of hospital being expanded
TORONTO — At age 69, Chris Burden is still working 60-hour weeks as a bailiff and process server, a job that takes him all over New Brunswick and has given rise to his self-styled moniker of “road runner.”
It’s a name he might have been forced to give up were it not for INSPIRED, a national program that helps people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD, to better manage their symptoms and avoid repeated admissions to hospital.
COPD is an incurable, progressive lung disease, most often caused by smoking, that affects an estimated 800,000 Canadians and is the country’s fourth leading cause of death.
Burden, who never smoked, was diagnosed with COPD about five years ago after he began experiencing severe breathlessness with the least bit of exertion.