Managing Your COPD Action Plan

A COPD Action Plan is a personalized, written guide created with your doctor. It’s your roadmap for daily management and your emergency protocol for handling symptom flare-ups (exacerbations). Having a plan empowers you to take control and know exactly what to do, reducing anxiety and preventing small problems from becoming crises.

Understanding the Traffic Light Zones
Most plans use a simple color-coded system:

Green Zone: Doing Well

  • How you feel: Your symptoms are at their usual baseline. You can perform your normal activities.
  • Your action: Continue with your daily management plan. Take your maintenance medications as prescribed. Follow your exercise and nutrition routines.

Yellow Zone: Caution – Symptoms are Worsening

  • Warning Signs: Increased coughing, shortness of breath, or wheezing. Change in mucus (color, amount, or thickness). Feeling more tired than usual. Low-grade fever.
  • Your action: This is where your plan provides specific instructions. It will tell you:
    • What rescue medications to start/increase (e.g., bronchodilators).
    • Whether to start a course of oral steroids or antibiotics (if prescribed in advance).
    • When to call your doctor’s office (e.g., if symptoms don’t improve within 48 hours).

Red Zone: Medical Alert – Danger

  • Warning Signs: Severe shortness of breath even at rest. Inability to speak in full sentences. Confusion, drowsiness, or dizziness. Lips or fingernails turning blue or gray.
  • Your action: This is an emergency. Do not wait. Follow your plan’s instruction to call 911 or seek emergency medical care immediately.

How to Create and Use Your Plan

  1. Schedule an appointment with your healthcare provider specifically to create your action plan.
  2. Be specific: Ensure the plan lists exact medication names, dosages, and the circumstances for taking them.
  3. Keep it visible: Post a copy on your refrigerator and keep one in your wallet/purse.
  4. Share it: Make sure your family, friends, and caregivers know about the plan and understand the zones.
  5. Review it regularly: Bring your plan to every doctor’s appointment and update it as your health or medications change.

A COPD Action Plan is a critical tool for staying healthy, out of the hospital, and in charge of your disease.