Literature DB >> 10937955

Diagnostic tests, treatment and follow-up in heart failure patients--is there a gender bias in the coherence to guidelines?

M Mejhert1, J Holmgren, P Wändell, H Persson, M Edner.   

Abstract

AIMS: To relate clinical data in a consecutive cohort of patients admitted with heart failure in Sweden to demographic data and the use of diagnostic tests, medical treatment, care process and mortality. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Retrospective investigation of all charts concerning patients discharged with primary diagnosis of heart failure in two Swedish hospitals during the second half of 1995 was undertaken. Records from 187 men and 192 women were analyzed, median age was 78 years. During hospital stay 75% of the patients, regardless of gender, were examined with chest radiography. Echocardiography was performed in 59% of all patients, more often in men than in women (68% vs. 55%, P<0.011). The proportion of patients receiving ACE-inhibitors was higher if echocardiography had been performed, in both men (38% vs. 72%, P<0.001) and women (38% vs. 55%, P<0.033). Mean hospital stay was 6.4 days. After discharge 57% of the patients were referred to the general practitioners (GP), 21% to the hospital outpatient clinic. Young age (P<0.001), male gender (P<0.01) and treatment with beta-blocking agents (P<0.035) were independently related to referral to hospital outpatient clinic. Within the group referred to the GPs, 62% of the patients had a follow-up visit within 3 months after discharge while 49% had visited the hospital outpatient clinic. The 1-year mortality rate was high, 30%.
CONCLUSION: Patients admitted with heart failure in Sweden are old and carry a poor prognosis. In spite of the poor prognosis, only approximately half of the patients are followed-up within 3 months after discharge. There is, in contrast to practice guidelines, an underuse of diagnostic tests of left ventricular function and medical treatment is often suboptimal. These unsatisfactory findings were more pronounced in women.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10937955     DOI: 10.1016/s1388-9842(99)00053-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Heart Fail        ISSN: 1388-9842            Impact factor:   15.534


  14 in total

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2.  Sex, quality of care, and outcomes of elderly patients hospitalized with heart failure: findings from the National Heart Failure Project.

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3.  Consultation with cardiologists for persons with new-onset chronic heart failure: a population-based study.

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4.  Limited long term effects of a management programme for heart failure.

Authors:  M Mejhert; T Kahan; H Persson; M Edner
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Authors:  Stefanie Houde; Debbie Ehrmann Feldman; Louise Pilote; Eduard J Beck; Nadia Giannetti; Marc Frenette; Anique Ducharme
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6.  Gender aspects on heart failure incidence and mortality in a middle-aged, urban, community-based population sample: the Malmö preventive project.

Authors:  G Tasevska-Dinevska; L M A Kennedy; P M Nilsson; R Willenheimer
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8.  Ventilatory variables are strong prognostic markers in elderly patients with heart failure.

Authors:  M Mejhert; E Linder-Klingsell; M Edner; T Kahan; H Persson
Journal:  Heart       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 5.994

9.  Effect of gender difference in management of heart failure patients in aseer, saudi arabia.

Authors:  Abdullah S Assiri
Journal:  Heart Views       Date:  2011-01

10.  Gender differences in the etiology of heart failure: A systematic review.

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Journal:  J Geriatr Cardiol       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 3.327

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