| Literature DB >> 26913090 |
Hans-Peter Brunner-La Rocca1, Lutz Fleischhacker2, Olga Golubnitschaja3, Frank Heemskerk4, Thomas Helms5, Thom Hoedemakers6, Sandra Huygen Allianses4, Tiny Jaarsma7, Judita Kinkorova8, Jan Ramaekers6, Peter Ruff9, Ivana Schnur10, Emilio Vanoli11, Jose Verdu12, Bettina Zippel-Schultz5.
Abstract
Chronic diseases are the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in Europe, accounting for more than 2/3 of all death causes and 75 % of the healthcare costs. Heart failure is one of the most prominent, prevalent and complex chronic conditions and is accompanied with multiple other chronic diseases. The current approach to care has important shortcomings with respect to diagnosis, treatment and care processes. A critical aspect of this situation is that interaction between stakeholders is limited and chronic diseases are usually addressed in isolation. Health care in Western countries requires an innovative approach to address chronic diseases to provide sustainability of care and to limit the excessive costs that may threaten the current systems. The increasing prevalence of chronic diseases combined with their enormous economic impact and the increasing shortage of healthcare providers are among the most critical threats. Attempts to solve these problems have failed, and future limitations in financial resources will result in much lower quality of care. Thus, changing the approach to care for chronic diseases is of utmost social importance.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular disease; Care processes; Chronic diseases; Communication and interaction; Future care; Health economics; Heart failure; Predictive preventive personalised medicine
Year: 2016 PMID: 26913090 PMCID: PMC4765020 DOI: 10.1186/s13167-016-0051-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EPMA J ISSN: 1878-5077 Impact factor: 6.543
Fig. 1Most important stakeholders in the care of a HF patient. Involvement of specialists other than cardiologist as required (not a complete list). Blue patient and family, green primary care, brown secondary/tertiary care
Fig. 2Required information exchange between two caregivers
Examples of different patient scenarios with similar underlying cardiac disease, depicting how the presence of co-morbidities significantly impacts treatment considerations and where guidelines fail to give guidance
| Heart failure patient scenario | Presence of co-morbidities | Treatment considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Stage C heart failure [ | Scenario 1- No major co-morbidities (mild COPD, diabetes on diet only) | • Guidelines recommended medical heart failure therapy:
ACE inhibitor, β-blocker, eplerenone, ev. loop diuretic; ICD
placement |
| Scenario 2- Arthritis as single important co-morbidity | Additional treatments required: | |
| Scenario 3 | Additional treatments required: | |
| Additional important aspects (incomplete
list): |
y years, LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction, CAD coronary artery disease, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ICD internal cardioverter defibrillator, NSAID non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, GP general practitioner
Fig. 3Current one-directional care in chronic diseases (green refers to primary care, brown to specialist care)