Rabe KF, Hurd S, Anzueto A, Barnes PJ, Buist SA, Calverley P, Fukuchi Y, Jenkins C, Rodriguez-Roisin R, van Weel C, et al. Global
strategy for the diagnosis, management, and prevention of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: GOLD Executive Summary. Am J
Respir Crit Care Med 2007;176:532–555.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remains a major
public health problem. It is the fourth leading cause of chronic
morbidity and mortality in the United States, and is projected to rank
fifth in 2020 in burden of disease worldwide, according to a study
published by the World Bank/World Health Organization. Yet,
COPD remains relatively unknown or ignored by the public as well
as public health and government officials. In 1998, in an effort to
bring more attention to COPD, its management, and its prevention,
a committed group of scientists encouraged the U.S. National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute and the World Health Organization to
form the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease
(GOLD). Among the important objectives of GOLD are to increase
awareness of COPD and to help the millions of people who suffer
from this disease and die prematurely of it or its complications. The
first step in the GOLD program was to prepare a consensus report,
Global Strategy for the Diagnosis, Management, and Prevention of
COPD, published in 2001. The present, newly revised document
follows the same format as the original consensus report, but has
been updated to reflect the many publications on COPD that have
appeared. GOLD national leaders, a network of international
experts, have initiated investigations of the causes and prevalence
of COPD in their countries, and developed innovative approaches
for the dissemination and implementation of COPD management
guidelines.We appreciate the enormous amount of work the GOLD
national leaders have done on behalf of their patients with COPD.
Despite the achievements in the 5 years since the GOLD report was
originally published, considerable additional work is ahead of us if
we are to control this major public health problem. The GOLD
initiative will continue to bring COPD to the attention of governments,
public health officials, health care workers, and the general
public, but a concerted effort by all involved in health care will be
necessary.




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