Monday, May 20, 2013

Increased Mortality Risk, Likelihood Of Hospital Readmission Following Heart Attack, Heart Failure

Increased Mortality Risk, Likelihood Of Hospital Readmission Following Heart Attack, Heart Failure


Increased Mortality Risk, Likelihood Of Hospital Readmission Following Heart Attack, Heart Failure

20 May 2013   

Heart attack or heart failure patients may have a high risk of death or re-admission for a month or longer after leaving the hospital, researchers said at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Scientific Sessions 2013. 

"The risks of death and re-hospitalization can extend well beyond 30 days after discharge, the time period used by the federal government for measuring hospital performance," said Kumar Dharmarajan, M.D., M.B.A., lead author of the study and a fellow in cardiology at Columbia University Medical Center in New York City, and visiting scholar at Yale University in New Haven, Conn. "Post-discharge care may be improved when aligned to the periods of greatest risk for patients." 

Researchers examined Medicare data on patients discharged for heart failure (878,963) and heart attack (350,509) and found:
  • Within the first year, 41.8 percent of heart failure patients died and 70.3 percent were re-hospitalized.
  • Within the first year, 25.9 percent of heart attack patients died and 50.5 percent were re-hospitalized.
  • The risk of re-hospitalization after heart failure took more than a month (43 days) to decline 50 percent from its peak level after discharge.
  • In the month after a heart attack, the likelihood of death is 21 times higher and the likelihood of hospitalization is 12 times higher than among the general Medicare-age population.
  • In the month after hospitalization for heart failure, the likelihood of death is 17 times higher and the likelihood of hospitalization is 16 times higher than among the general Medicare-age population.
"In the weeks after hospital discharge, your risk of death, re-hospitalization and other complications is very high," Dharmarajan said. "If you feel ill, take it seriously and contact your healthcare provider."
References:
American Heart Association meeting report: Abstract 329
Co-authors are Angela F. Hsieh, Ph.D.; Vivek T. Kulkarni, A.B.; Zhenqiu Lin, Ph.D.; Joseph S. Ross, M.D., M.H.S.; Leora I Horwitz, M.D., M.H.S.; Nancy Kim, M.D., Ph.D.; Lisa G. Suter, M.D.; Susannah M. Bernheim, M.D., M.H.S.; Elizabeth E. Drye, M.D., S.M.; Sharon-Lise Normand, Ph.D., M.Sc.; and Harlan M. Krumholz, M.D., M.S.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute funded the study. Additional disclosures are on the abstract.
American Heart Association

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