Bill Text: GA HR1768 | 2011-2012 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Awareness Month; May, 2012; proclaim
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 5-0)
Status: (Passed) 2012-03-12 - House Read and Adopted [HR1768 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2011-HR1768-Introduced.html
12 LC
33 4707
House
Resolution 1768
By:
Representatives Cooper of the
41st,
Dudgeon of the
24th,
Sims of the
119th,
Clark of the
104th,
and Watson of the
163rd
A
RESOLUTION
Proclaiming
May, 2012, as Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Awareness Month; and for
other purposes.
WHEREAS,
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a term used to describe airflow
obstruction that is associated mainly with emphysema and chronic bronchitis;
and
WHEREAS,
COPD affects an estimated 24 million people and kills more than 120,000
Americans every year; on average, one person dies from COPD every four minutes,
an alarming statistic for a disease many are not aware of; and
WHEREAS,
in 2010, the National Center for Health Statistics released a report stating
that in 2008 COPD became the third leading cause of death in the United States;
and
WHEREAS,
pulmonary experts predict that, by the year 2020, COPD will become the third
leading cause of death worldwide; and
WHEREAS,
COPD currently accounts for 1.5 million emergency room visits, 726,000
hospitalizations, and 8 million physician office and hospital outpatient visits,
all of which are a detriment to the U.S. economy; COPD costs the nation an
estimated $42.6 billion in direct and indirect medical costs annually;
and
WHEREAS,
research has identified a hereditary protein deficiency called Alpha-1
Antitrypsin; people with this deficiency tend to develop COPD, even without
exposure to
smoking or environmental triggers; and
smoking or environmental triggers; and
WHEREAS,
recently, the death rate for women with COPD has surpassed the death rate of men
with COPD; women over the age of 40 are the fastest-growing segment of the
population developing this irreversible disease, due in large part to the
equalization of opportunities for men and women to smoke over the past several
generations; and
WHEREAS, there is currently no cure for COPD; spirometry testing and medical treatments exist to address symptom relief and possibly slow the progression of the disease; and
WHEREAS, there is currently no cure for COPD; spirometry testing and medical treatments exist to address symptom relief and possibly slow the progression of the disease; and
WHEREAS,
until there is a cure, the best approaches to preventing COPD and its
considerable health, societal, and mortality impacts lie with education,
awareness, and expanded delivery of detection and management
protocols.
NOW,
THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES that the members of
this body proclaim May, 2012, as Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Awareness Month.