Texas 2013 - 83rd Regular

Texas Senate Bill SCR26 Latest Draft

Bill / House Committee Report Version Filed 02/01/2025

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                            By: Hinojosa S.C.R. No. 26
 (J. Davis of Harris)


 SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 WHEREAS, "Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease" (COPD) is
 an umbrella term used to describe progressive lung diseases
 including emphysema, chronic bronchitis, refractory nonreversible
 asthma, and some forms of bronchiectasis; and
 WHEREAS, In people with COPD, the airways and air sacs in the
 lungs lose their elastic qualities and cannot bounce back to their
 original shape and then become swollen and thicker and in some cases
 partially blocked or obstructed, leading to difficulty breathing
 and ultimately to the inability to breathe; and
 WHEREAS, Smoking is the main risk factor for developing COPD,
 and secondhand smoke exposure, occupational dust, chemical
 exposure, air pollution, and genetics are also common causes of
 COPD; and
 WHEREAS, Nationally the COPD Foundation reports that COPD is
 responsible for direct and indirect health care-related costs
 projected at $49.9 billion in 2010, and that 70 percent of those
 costs are related to hospitalizations; and
 WHEREAS, It is also estimated by the Agency for Healthcare
 Research and Quality that one out of five individuals over forty in
 the hospital have COPD; and
 WHEREAS, In Texas the prevalence of COPD is 5.5 percent of the
 total population, and COPD affects individuals across all age
 groups but at even higher rates for individuals aged 55-64 at 8.1
 percent and individuals 65 and over at a shocking 13.3 percent; and
 WHEREAS, The American Association for Respiratory Care
 reports that nationally just over half of all persons with COPD
 report that their condition limits their ability to work and 34
 percent say that COPD keeps them from working; and
 WHEREAS, There is no cure for COPD, and its lung damage is
 irreversible; treatments can improve a patient's quality of life by
 reducing frequency and severity of exacerbations, prevent symptoms
 from growing worse, and improving health status; and
 WHEREAS, Treatments for COPD include stopping smoking,
 removing air pollutants from home and work, and treating symptoms
 with medication and pulmonary rehabilitation; and
 WHEREAS, The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
 reports that in 2011 chronic lower respiratory diseases, which are
 included within the conditions under the umbrella term of COPD, are
 the third-leading cause of death in the United States; and
 WHEREAS, Many individuals who experience shortness of breath
 or other early symptoms of COPD mistake these symptoms as being a
 part of the normal aging process and then wait to receive treatments
 until the conditions are severe and the lung damage is
 significantly more difficult to treat and manage; and
 WHEREAS, Concerted public outreach efforts such as a
 DRIVE4COPD, the nation's largest public awareness and screening
 campaign for COPD, and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
 Institute's COPD "Learn More Breathe Better Campaign" can
 dramatically improve public awareness of COPD; now, therefore, be
 it
 RESOLVED, That the 83rd Legislature of the State of Texas
 hereby recognize Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease as a chronic
 health condition in Texas which contributes to increasing health
 care costs and decreasing productivity of its citizens; and, be it
 further
 RESOLVED, That the 83rd Legislature of the State of Texas
 direct the Texas Department of State Health Services to include
 COPD as a chronic health condition in their efforts to address
 serious and chronic health conditions in Texas by seeking out and
 applying for funding and grants available to provide public
 awareness or treatment for COPD in Texas; and, be it further
 RESOLVED, That the 83rd Legislature of the State of Texas
 direct the Texas Department of State Health Services to include
 COPD as a chronic health condition in their current efforts to
 educate the public about the effects of smoking or other
 preventable and treatable chronic health conditions; and, be it
 further
 RESOLVED, That the 83rd Legislature of the State of Texas
 hereby designate November as COPD Awareness Month; and, be it
 further
 RESOLVED, That in accordance with the provisions of Section
 391.004(d), Government Code, the designation expires on the 10th
 anniversary of the date this resolution is passed by the
 legislature.