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Heart Failure Gives Hard Time to Healthcare Services

by Dr. Jayashree Gopinath on Feb 14 2023 10:50 PM
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What is the impact of heart failure on healthcare? Heart failure patients suffer from co-morbidities, which places a great strain on healthcare services.

 Heart Failure Gives Hard Time to Healthcare Services
Patients with heart failure often suffer from co-morbidities, which places a great strain on healthcare services, suggests a multinational study published in Heart reports. Till now, there were no multinational studies describing heart failure patients and the consequences of the disease.
Researchers at Karolinska Institutet, identify an urgent need to improve risk management of the disease. Up to 64 million people around the world have heart failure a figure that is expected to rise as populations age and diagnostic methods improve.

Given that we know that the incidence of heart failure increases with population age, a modern, broad view of what the heart failure population looks like, involving risks and costs, is important for all forms of care planning.

Researchers, therefore, collected data from both digital medical records and national registry data on over 600,000 heart failure patients from eleven European countries, including Sweden, plus Canada, and Israel, between 2018 and 2020.

Clinical and Economic Burden of Worsening Heart Failure

The study concludes that between one and two percent of the population suffer heart failure and shows that it is relatively fatal, with an average annual death rate of 13 percent. Heart failure patients also suffer a higher rate of co-morbidity than previous national studies have suggested.

One likely reason for the escalation in comorbidity in such patients is that we live longer nowadays with several concurrent conditions. This complicates heart failure care even more, as there are many contributory factors to take into account of.

Another of the study’s conclusions is that heart failure is costly. In Europe, one to two percent of the total healthcare budget goes towards heart failure care, a cost that is expected to increase.

The healthcare costs are mainly related to a deterioration in heart and kidney failure that requires hospitalization, and to a lesser extent to traditional cardiovascular diseases such as heart attack and stroke. So, the data make it clear that intervention to prevent further heart and kidney failure is needed.

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This is interesting because a possible new treatment is now available for these patients. It’s a diabetes drug that, following extensive studies, is now used for heart failure, irrespective of whether the patients have diabetes.

These new drugs were not used by our cohort since the evidence wasn’t in place until 2020. Now that the evidence is here, it’ll be interesting to see if the situation can be improved, as we have high hopes it will.

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Source-Eurekalert


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