| Literature DB >> 12825149 |
Benny Levenson1, Alexander Albrecht, Stefan Göhring, Winfried Haerer, Harald Herholz, Martin Kaltenbach, Nicolaus Reifart, Gregor Sauer, Sigmund Silber, Bernhard Troger.
Abstract
The Society of German Cardiologists in private practice (BNK) reports about its project on quality assurance in invasive cardiology (QuIK). Results of a computerized data collection and analysis of cardiac catheterizations and interventions in the years 1999-2002 are presented. These results are compared with other registries. The QuIK-project is done voluntarily by 70% of the society's cardiologists who perform invasive methods. A total of 225,562 diagnostic and 64,895 interventional procedures are documented over the 4 years. Patient characteristics and procedural data kept unchanged. Complication rates were low (< 2%), MACE < 0.5%. There was a rising number of patients referred with acute myocardial infarction. Less time was used to complete procedures from 1 year to another. Two out of three of the centers underwent a monitoring/auditing process in 2002. The desirable post-interventional follow-up after discharge in all cases appears to be impossible to fulfill under the given economical circumstances.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12825149 DOI: 10.1007/s00059-003-2481-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Herz ISSN: 0340-9937 Impact factor: 1.443