Patients Hospitalized for Heart Failure Declined in US
Having heart failure means that for some reason your heart is not pumping blood around the body as well as it used to. People with heart failure experience different symptoms and everyone copes in different ways.
In the United States, the number of people hospitalized for heart failure declined about 30 percent between 2002 and 2013, but large disparities between blacks vs. whites and men vs. women remain, according to new research in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, an American Heart Association journal.
‘Heart failure is a long-term condition that tends to get gradually worse over time. It can't usually be cured, but the symptoms can often be controlled for many years.’
The study is the first to report on the age-standardized racial/ethnic differences in national heart failure hospitalization rates between whites, blacks, Hispanics and Asians/Pacific Islanders.
Researchers examined data from the National Inpatient Survey from 2002-2013, which consisted of data from 7-8 million hospital discharge per year across thousands of hospitals.
They found:
Overall, the national rate of heart failure hospitalization decreased by about 30 percent.
Hospitalization rates for heart failure in men grew to be 39 percent higher than women.
Hospitalization rates for heart failure in blacks was more than 200 percent higher than for whites with no significant change over the period.
The rate for Hispanics dropped much faster than for whites with the disparity between the two groups narrowing to just 4 percent higher among Hispanic men, and decreasing from an initial 55 percent higher rate among Hispanic women in 2002 to only 8 percent higher in 2013.
The decrease in hospitalization rates suggest that efforts to improve outpatient treatment and prevention measures have successfully reduced the number of heart failure patients needing hospitalization. However, the improvements are not equally distributed across races/ethnicities and genders.
"Disparities in disease burden for males and especially African-Americans have not improved in the recent decade," said lead author Boback Ziaeian, M.D., Ph.D., clinical instructor at the University of California Los Angeles and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. "The findings highlight the need to address population-based health, prevention and outpatient management of chronic diseases."
The authors note higher hospitalization burden among blacks and Hispanics is more reflective of underlying social determinants of health of health rather than genetics or physiologic differences.
The results should be met with caution as data collection had limitations.
Source: Eurekalert