In a new study it has been highlighted that heart failure patients admitted to general wards are twice as likely to die as those admitted to cardiology wards.
In a new study it has been highlighted that heart failure patients admitted to general wards are twice as likely to die as those admitted to cardiology wards. The national heart failure audit for England and Wales also suggests that women fared worse than men when it comes to appropriate investigations and treatment, although death rates were similar.
The authors draw their conclusions from a survey of the first 10 patients admitted each month with a primary diagnosis of heart failure to 86 hospitals across England and Wales between April 2008 and March 2009.
During this period, just over 6,000 patients, with an average age of 78, were admitted with the condition. Almost half of these were women.
At admission, less than a third were reported to be breathless at rest and under half as having swollen feet/ankles. These are both diagnostic features of heart failure.
Appropriate investigations were not always carried out, the survey shows, with those admitted to general medical wards less likely to receive these than those admitted to cardiology wards.
Most patients were given a heart trace monitor test (echo-cardiogram). But only two thirds of those admitted to general medical wards were given this test.
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But LVEF was not recorded in one in four patients. And those with an LVEF of under 40 percent or in whom LVEF was not recorded were more likely to be women, older, and managed on general medical wards.
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Source-ANI