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Moving from heart failure guidelines to clinical practice: gaps contributing to readmissions in patients with multiple comorbidities and older age

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-12-01, 00:00 authored by Pupalan Iyngkaran, Danny Liew, Christopher Neil, Andrea DriscollAndrea Driscoll, Thomas H Marwick, David L Hare
This feature article for the thematic series on congestive heart failure (CHF) readmissions aims to outline important gaps in guidelines for patients with multiple comorbidities and the elderly. Congestive heart failure diagnosis manifests as a 3-phase journey between the hospital and community, during acute, chronic stable, and end-of-life (palliative) phases. This journey requires in variable intensities a combination of multidisciplinary care within tertiary hospital or ambulatory care from hospital outpatients or primary health services, within the general community. Management goals are uniform, ie, to achieve the lowest New York Heart Association class possible, with improvement in ejection fraction, by delivering gold standard therapies within a CHF program. Comorbidities are an important common denominator that influences outcomes. Comorbidities include diabetes mellitus, chronic obstructive airways disease, chronic renal impairment, hypertension, obesity, sleep apnea, and advancing age. Geriatric care includes the latter as well as syndromes such as frailty, falls, incontinence, and confusion. Many systems still fail to comprehensively achieve all aspects of such programs. This review explores these factors.

History

Journal

Clinical medicine insights: cardiology

Volume

12

Publisher

Sage Publications

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1179-5468

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, The Authors