| Literature DB >> 33281513 |
Alexander C Razavi1,2,3, Dominique J Monlezun1,2,3, Alexander Sapin1,2,3, Leah Sarris1,2,3, Emily Schlag1,2,3, Amber Dyer1,2,3, Timothy Harlan1,2,3.
Abstract
Background. Reducing the under-30-day readmission for heart failure (HF) patients is a modifiable quality-of-care measure, yet the role of diet in HF readmissions and cost-effective HF care remain ill-defined. Methods. Medical chart review was conducted to determine cause(s) for HF treatment failure. Randomized controlled trial-backed machine learning models were employed to assess the relationship of culinary medicine education with HF 30-day readmission rate and cost. Results. Of 1031 HF admissions, 130 occurred within 30 days of discharge (12.61%.) Nearly two-thirds of individuals were male (64.02%), while the mean age and median length of stay were 64.33 ± 14.02 and 2, respectively. Medication noncompliance (34.62%) was the most common etiology for 30-day readmissions, followed by dietary noncompliance (16.92%), comorbidity (16.92%), a combination of dietary and medication noncompliance (10%), HF exacerbation (10%), iatrogenic (10%), and drug abuse (1.54%). Medication noncompliance contributed to the highest gross charge by readmission, costing a total of $1 802 096. Compared with traditional care, culinary medicine education for HF patients would prevent 93 HF readmissions and save $3.9 million in an estimated 4-year period. Conclusion. Though pharmacological treatment remains a focal point of HF management, diet-based approaches may improve tertiary HF prevention and reduce HF-associated health care expenditures.Entities:
Keywords: cooking; heart failure; lifestyle; nutrition therapy; patient readmission
Year: 2019 PMID: 33281513 PMCID: PMC7692009 DOI: 10.1177/1559827619861933
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Lifestyle Med ISSN: 1559-8276