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1.
BackgroundChronic heart failure (CHF) causes great suffering for both patients and their partners. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of an integrated dyad care program with education and psychosocial support to patients with CHF and their partners during a postdischarge period after acute deterioration of CHF.MethodsOne hundred fifty-five patient-caregiver dyads were randomized to usual care (n = 71) or a psychoeducation intervention (n = 84) delivered in 3 modules through nurse-led face-to-face counseling, computer-based education, and other written teaching materials to assist dyads to develop problem-solving skills. Follow-up assessments were completed after 3 and 12 months to assess perceived control, perceived health, depressive symptoms, self-care, and caregiver burden.ResultsBaseline sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of dyads in the experimental and control groups were similar at baseline. Significant differences were observed in patients’ perceived control over the cardiac condition after 3 (P < .05) but not after 12 months, and no effect was seen for the caregivers.No group differences were observed over time in dyads’ health-related quality of life and depressive symptoms, patients’ self-care behaviors, and partners’ experiences of caregiver burden.ConclusionsIntegrated dyad care focusing on skill-building and problem-solving education and psychosocial support was effective in initially enhancing patients’ levels of perceived control. More frequent professional contact and ongoing skills training may be necessary to have a higher impact on dyad outcomes and warrants further research.  相似文献   

2.
BackgroundPoor self-management of heart failure (HF) is an essential contributor to poor outcomes. Caregivers are involved in the care of HF patients, but caregiver interventions intended to improve the outcomes of patients have been largely unsuccessful. Improved knowledge of caregivers' desired roles in care may improve future interventions.Methods and ResultsThis qualitative study of 20 caregivers of HF patients recruited from an academic medical center used a general inductive approach, with insights from role theory, to analyze the data. Caregivers perceived themselves as health care managers and care plan enforcers, advocates for quality of life, and experts in the lived experience of HF at home. However, they encountered role strain (expectations of role exceed ability to perform role) and role conflict (incompatible or contradictory roles) when it seemed that these roles were incompatible with those that they felt the health care system saw them in. This resulted in expressions of anger and distrust towards the health care system.ConclusionsClinicians caring for patients with HF can seek to better empower and enable this care. Involving caregivers in disease management research and assessing their roles before intervention may hold promise for enabling and empowering caregivers to improve outcomes of HF patients.  相似文献   

3.
BackgroundMedication nonadherence is prevalent and links to serious outcomes (e.g., rehospitalization/death) in heart failure (HF) patients; therefore, an urgent need exists for an intervention to improve and sustain adherence after intervention completion.ObjectivesTo test the efficacy of a multi-component, family-focused, literacy-sensitive (FamLit) intervention on medication adherence in HF patients.MethodsForty-three HF patients and their care partners were enrolled and randomized to receive FamLit or attention-only intervention, including an in-person session at baseline and bi-weekly phone boosters for 3 months. We measured medication adherence from baseline to 3-month post-intervention using the Medication Event Monitoring System.ResultsAfter 3-month intervention, intervention patients had significantly better medication adherence than control patients. At 6 months (3-months post-intervention), intervention effect on adherence was sustained in the FamLit intervention group, while adherence decreased in the control group.ConclusionIncorporating care partner support and providing an easy-to-understand intervention to patients-care partners may improve/sustain adherence.  相似文献   

4.
BackgroundDyads that view illnesses as shared stressors (“shared appraisal”), and collaboratively respond to it, have better outcomes. This process, known as communal coping, has received little attention in heart failure (HF).ObjectivesTo examine communal coping among patient-caregiver dyads managing HF.MethodsWe conducted semi-structured interviews with 34 dyads. Shared appraisal was measured using we-ratio, as calculated with Linguistic Inquiry Word Count. We-ratio was divided into “high” and “low” for patients and caregivers, and concordance was examined. Thematic analyses were used to explore collaboration.ResultsCaregivers had higher we-ratios than patients (p=.005); 29.6% and 33.3% dyads were concordant on high and low “we-ratio,” respectively. In thematic analyses, we found that 1) dyads collaborated around diet, appointments, and medications, but less around physical activity; 2) dyads collaborated across all illnesses, not just HF; and 3) dyads concordant on high we-ratio reported stronger collaborations.ConclusionsCommunal coping varied by shared appraisal and collaboration. Understanding this variability may help develop tailored self-management interventions.  相似文献   

5.
Background:Sex differences in presentation, management, and outcomes of heart failure (HF) have been observed, but it is uncertain whether these differences exist in South India.Objective:We describe sex differences in presentation, management, and in-hospital outcomes in patients hospitalized with HF in South India and explore sex-based differences in the effect of the quality improvement intervention in a secondary analysis of a prospective, interrupted time series study.Methods:The Heart Failure Quality Improvement in Kerala (HF QUIK) study evaluated the effect of a quality improvement toolkit on process of care measures and clinical outcomes in patients hospitalized with HF in eight hospitals in Kerala using an interrupted time series design from February 2018 to August 2018. The primary outcome was guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) at hospital discharge for patients with HF with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). We performed sex-stratified analyses using mixed effect logistic regression models.Results:Among 1,400 patients, 536 (38.3%) were female. Female patients were older (69.6 vs. 65 years, p < 0.001), were less likely to have an ischemic etiology of HF (control period: 78.2% vs. 87.5%; intervention period: 83.6% vs. 91.5%; p < 0.05 for both) and were less likely to undergo coronary angiography or percutaneous coronary intervention. The quality improvement intervention had similar effects on the odds of GDMT at discharge in females with HFrEF (adjusted OR 1.79, 95% CI 0.92, 3.47) and males with HFrEF (adjusted OR 1.68, 95% CI 1.07, 2.64, pinteraction = 0.69).Conclusions:We observed sex-specific differences in presentation and procedural management of patients with HF but no differences in the effect of the quality improvement intervention on discharge GDMT rates. Both male and female patients with HFrEF remained undertreated in the study intervention period, demonstrating the need for implementation strategies to close the HFrEF treatment gap in South India.  相似文献   

6.
BackgroundOlder adults with heart failure (HF) often need caregivers to assist with care, yet little is known about the health literacy of both patients and their caregivers. The objective of this study was to assess health literacy and the relationship between health literacy and HF self-care in HF patient-caregiver dyads.Methods and ResultsSeventeen patient-caregiver dyads were recruited. Dyads completed a measure of HF self-care and 2 measures of health literacy: 3 validated questions and a nutrition label reading task. Patients were older than caregivers and the majority of both patients and caregivers were female. Caregivers had higher health literacy by both the health literacy questions (P = .001) and label-reading measure (P = .001). All caregivers had adequate health literacy as assessed by the 3 questions, but 29% had inadequate health literacy according to the label-reading task. Caregivers and patients scored adequately in HF maintenance but inadequately in management and confidence domains.ConclusionsCaregivers had better health literacy than patients; however, the task-oriented label-reading measure revealed poorer health literacy than the self-report measure. Measures of health literacy that reflect day to day tasks may be more illuminating than the 3 questions.  相似文献   

7.
《Journal of cardiac failure》2023,29(8):1175-1183
ObjectiveNewer therapies have increased heart failure (HF) survival rates, but these therapies are rarely curative. The consequence of increased longevity is the likelihood that patients with HF will experience higher symptom burdens over time. Exercise such as cardiac rehabilitation programs can palliate symptom burdens, but numerous barriers prevent exercise participation and adherence. Small pilot studies indicate short-term beneficial effects of gentle forms of exercise such as yoga to address symptom burdens and accommodate comorbidities. Long-term symptom benefit and adherence to yoga are currently unknown. Therefore, a novel a home-based, gentle-stretching intervention that addresses issues of exercise access and adherence is described in this article.PurposeThe purpose of this article is to describe the background, design and study methodology of the Getting Into Light Exercise for HF (GENTLE-HF) randomized controlled trial. Gentle-HF will test a gentle stretching and education intervention compared to an education control group concerning symptom burden (dyspnea, exercise, activity adherence, depression, and anxiety) and quality of life. As an exploratory aim, we also will determine whether rurality moderates the relationships between exercise participation and symptom burden as a measure of health equity.MethodsWe designed a randomized controlled trial study (n = 234) with 2 arms: a gentle stretching intervention arm with HF education and an HF education-only control. Participants will be recruited from U.S. cardiology clinics in the mid-Atlantic and the San Francisco Bay areas. This recruitment strategy will include individuals from urban, suburban and rural areas and individuals that have diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds. All participants will be provided with an iPad set up to access HF educational topics, and the intervention arm will have both educational and gentle-stretching class links. Both arms will access the HF health education icons on their iPads weekly; they correspond to the 6 months (26 weeks) of study participation. Symptom burden (dyspnea, fatigue, exercise intolerance, depression, anxiety) and quality of life will be measured at the study's start and completion. Study adherence will be measured by using attendance rates and number of class minutes attended.ResultsThe GENTLE-HF study is a randomized study that will test the effect of a home-based, video-conference-delivered gentle stretching and HF education intervention designed for patients with HF. The findings will inform whether gentle stretching can decrease symptom burden and potentially provide access to symptom palliation for a diverse population of patients with HF.  相似文献   

8.
BackgroundMedication nonadherence contributes to hospitalization and mortality, yet there have been few interventions tested that improve adherence and reduce hospitalization and mortality in heart failure (HF). Our objective was to determine whether an education intervention improved medication adherence and cardiac event–free survival.Methods and ResultsA randomized controlled trial was conducted on 82 HF patients. The intervention was based on the theory of planned behavior (TPB) and included feedback of medication-taking behavior using the Medication Event Monitoring System (MEMS). Patients were assigned to one of three groups: 1) theory-based education plus MEMS feedback; 2) theory-based education only; or 3) usual care (control). Cardiac events were collected for 9 months. Patients in both intervention groups were more adherent over follow-up compared with the control group. In Cox regression, patients in either intervention group had a longer event-free survival compared with those in the control group before and after controlling age, marital status, financial status, ejection fraction, New York Heart Association functional class, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor use, and presence or absence of a significant other during the intervention (P < .05).ConclusionsUse of an intervention based on the TPB improves medication adherence and outcomes in patients with HF and therefore offers promise as a clinically applicable intervention to help patients with HF to adhere to their prescribed regimen.  相似文献   

9.
《Journal of cardiac failure》2022,28(11):1575-1583
BackgroundMobile health (mHealth) platforms can affect health behaviors but have not been rigorously tested in randomized trials.ObjectivesWe sought to evaluate the effectiveness of a pragmatic mHealth intervention in patients with heart failure (HF) and diabetes (DM).MethodsWe conducted a multicenter randomized trial in 187 patients with both HF and DM to assess an mHealth intervention to improve physical activity and medication adherence compared to usual care. The primary endpoint was change in mean daily step count from baseline through 3 months. Other outcomes included medication adherence, health-related quality of life and metabolomic profiling.ResultsThe mHealth group had an increase in daily step count of 151 steps/day at 3 months, whereas the usual-care group had a decline of 162 steps/day (least squares mean between-group difference = 313 steps/day; 95% CI: 8 619; P = 0.044). Medication adherence, measured using the Voils Adherence Questionnaire, did not change from baseline to 3 months (LS-mean change –0.08 in mHealth vs –0.15 in usual care; P = 0.47). The mHealth group had an improvement in Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire Overall Summary Score compared to the usual-care group (LS-mean difference = 5.5 points, 95% CI: 1.4, 9.6; P = 0.009). Thirteen metabolites, primarily medium- and long-chain acylcarnitines, changed differently between treatment groups from baseline to 3 months (P < 0.05).ConclusionsIn patients with HF and DM, a 3-month mHealth intervention significantly improved daily physical activity, health-related quality of life and metabolomic markers of cardiovascular health but not medication adherence.Condensed AbstractHeart failure (HF) and diabetes (DM) have overlapping biological and behavioral risk factors. We conducted a multicenter randomized, clinical trial in 187 patients with both HF (regardless of ejection fraction) and DM to assess whether an mHealth intervention could improve physical activity and medication adherence. The mHealth group had an increase in mean daily step count and quality of life but not in medication adherence. Medium- and long-chain acylcarnitines changed differently in treatment groups from baseline to 3 months (P < 0.05). These data have important implications for designing effective lifestyle interventions in HF and DM.  相似文献   

10.
BackgroundThe objective of this 3-arm randomized controlled trial was to evaluate the efficacy of computerized cognitive training (CCT) in improving primary outcomes of delayed-recall memory and serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels; and the secondary outcomes were working memory, instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) and health-related quality of life (HRQL) in patients with heart failure (HF).Methods and ResultsPatients (n = 256) were randomly assigned to 8 weeks of CCT using BrainHQ, computerized crossword puzzles active control intervention, and usual care. All patients received weekly nurse-enhancement interventions. Data were collected at enrollment and baseline visits and at 10 weeks and 4 and 8 months. In mixed effects models, there were no statistically significant group or group-by-time differences in outcomes. There were statistically significant differences over time in all outcomes in all groups. Patients improved over time on measures of delayed-recall memory, working memory, IADLs, and HRQL and had decreased serum BDNF.ConclusionsCCT did not improve outcomes compared with the active control intervention and usual care. Nurse-enhancement interventions may have led to improved outcomes over time. Future studies are needed to test nurse-enhancement interventions in combination with other cognitive interventions to improve memory in persons with HF.  相似文献   

11.
Background:Nearly half of patients with heart failure (HF) have preserved ejection fraction (EF) and the mortality and morbidity of patients with HF with preserved EF (HFpEF) are high. However, there is no established therapy to improve survival in these patients. HFpEF patients are often elderly and their primary chronic symptom is severe exercise intolerance. Thus, improvement of exercise capacity presents another important clinical outcome in HFpEF patients. Iron deficiency is common in HF patients, and the presence of iron deficiency, regardless of concomitant anemia, is associated with worse symptoms, impaired exercise capacity, and higher mortality and hospitalization in these patients. Several meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials reported that iron administration improved HF symptoms, exercise capacity, and clinical outcomes in iron-deficiency patients with HF with reduced EF. However, there is insufficient evidence as to the effect of iron administration in iron-deficiency HFpEF patients.Methods and Results:This meta-analysis will include randomized controlled trials on the effects of iron administration on HF symptoms, exercise capacity, and health-related quality of life in iron-deficiency HFpEF patients. Information of studies will be collected from PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, and ClinicalTrials.gov. The primary outcome will be exercise capacity (6-minute walking distance). The secondary outcomes will be HF symptoms, health-related quality of life, and mortality and hospitalization rates.Conclusion:This meta-analysis will evaluate the effect of iron therapy in iron-deficiency HFpEF patients, providing evidence as to the iron administration in these patients.Systematic review registration:PROSPERO CRD42020205297.  相似文献   

12.
BackgroundPractical recommendations on nonpharmacologic non-device/surgical interventions in patients with heart failure (HF) are well known. Although complementary treatments may have beneficial effects, there is no evidence that these on their own improve mortality, morbidity, or quality of life. We examined the effects of listening to recorded classical music on HF-specific quality of life (QOL), generic QOL, sleep quality, anxiety, depression, and cognitive state in patients with HF in the home-care setting.Methods and ResultsMulticenter randomized controlled trial. One hundred fifty-nine patients with HF were randomized on a 1:1 basis in 2 groups: experimental (music) and control. Patients were evaluated after 30, 60, 90 days (experimental period) and at 6 months. Patients randomized to the music group listened to music from a large preselected playlist, at least 30 minutes per day, for 3 months on an MP3 player. Patients in the control group received standard care. HF-specific QOL, generic QOL, self-care, somatic perception of HF symptoms, sleep quality, anxiety and depression, and cognitive abilities were assessed throughout the use of specific scales. On average, patients in the music group showed greater improvements in terms of HF-specific QOL (P < .001), generic-QOL (P = .005), quality of sleep (P = .007), anxiety and depression levels (P < .001 for both), and cognitive performances (P = .003).ConclusionsListening to recorded classical music is a feasible, noninvasive, safe, and inexpensive intervention, able to improve QOL in patients with HF in the home-care setting.  相似文献   

13.
BackgroundCaregivers of patients with heart failure (HF) report depressive symptoms and poor quality of life (QOL) related to caregiving and poor family functioning, placing them at risk for poor health.ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to examine the effect of depressive symptoms on the relationship between family functioning and quality of life in the HF caregiver.MethodsA sample of 92 HF caregivers were enrolled from an ambulatory clinic at a large academic medical center. A mediation analysis was used to analyze data obtained from the Family Assessment Device (FAD), the Patient Health Questionaire-9 (PHQ-9), and the Short Form-12 Health Survey Version 2 (SF-12v2).ResultsDepressive symptoms were found to be a significant mediator in the relationship between family functioning and caregiver quality of life.ConclusionsThe results of this study suggest that interventions targeting caregiver depression and family functioning could be effective in enhancing HF caregivers’ physical and mental QOL.  相似文献   

14.
Objective: To assess the feasibility of a mobile health, inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) adherence reminder intervention and to characterize adherence trajectories immediately following severe asthma exacerbation in high-risk urban children with persistent asthma. Methods: Children aged 2–13 with persistent asthma were enrolled in this pilot randomized controlled trial during an asthma emergency department (ED) visit or hospitalization. Intervention arm participants received daily text message reminders for 30 days, and both arms received electronic sensors to measure ICS use. Primary outcomes were feasibility of sensor use and text message acceptability. Secondary outcomes included adherence to prescribed ICS regimen and 30-day adherence trajectories. Group-based trajectory modeling was used to examine adherence trajectories. Results: Forty-one participants (mean age 5.9) were randomized to intervention (n = 21) or control (n = 20). Overall, 85% were Black, 88% had public insurance, and 51% of the caregivers had a high school education or less. Thirty-two participant families (78%) transmitted medication adherence data; of caregivers who completed the acceptability survey, 25 (96%) chose to receive daily reminders beyond that study interval. Secondary outcome analyses demonstrated similar average daily adherence between groups (intervention = 36%; control = 32%, P = 0.73). Three adherence trajectories were identified with none ever exceeding 80% adherence. Conclusions: Within a high-risk pediatric cohort, electronic monitoring of ICS use and adherence reminders delivered via text message were feasible for most participants, but there was no signal of effect. Adherence trajectories following severe exacerbation were suboptimal, demonstrating an important opportunity for asthma care improvement.  相似文献   

15.
Heart failure (HF) is the leading cause of rehospitalization in older adults. The purpose of this pilot study was to examine whether telemonitoring by an advanced practice nurse reduced subsequent hospital readmissions, emergency department visits, costs, and risk of hospital readmission for patients with HF. One hundred two patient/caregiver dyads were randomized into 2 groups postdischarge; 84 dyads completed the study. Hospital readmissions, emergency department visits, costs, and days to readmission were abstracted from medical records. Participants were interviewed soon after discharge and 3 months later about effects of telemonitoring on depressive symptoms, quality of life, and caregiver mastery. There were no significant differences due to telemonitoring for any outcomes. Caregiver mastery, informal social support, and electronic home monitoring were not significant predictors for risk of hospital readmission. Further studies should address the interaction between the advanced practice nurse and follow-up intervention with telemonitoring of patients with HF to better target those who are most likely to benefit.  相似文献   

16.
BackgroundWe performed a prospective, randomized investigation assessing the incremental effect of automated health monitoring (AHM) technology over and above that of a previously described nurse directed heart failure (HF) disease management program. The AHM system measured and transmitted body weight, blood pressure, and heart rate data as well as subjective patient self-assessments via a standard telephone line to a central server.Methods and ResultsA total of 188 consented and eligible patients were randomized between intervention and control groups in 1:1 ratio. Subjects randomized to the control arm received the Specialized Primary and Networked Care in Heart Failure (SPAN-CHF) heart failure disease management program. Subjects randomized to the intervention arm received the SPAN-CHF disease management program in conjunction with the AHM system. The primary end point was prespecified as the relative event rate of HF hospitalization between intervention and control groups at 90 days. The relative event rate of HF hospitalization for the intervention group compared with controls was 0.50 (95%CI [0.25–0.99], P = .05).ConclusionsShort-term reductions in the heart failure hospitalization rate were associated with the use of automated home monitoring equipment. Long-term benefits in this model remain to be studied.  相似文献   

17.
BackgroundThere is evidence that heart failure (HF) patients who receive pharmacist care have better clinical outcomes.Methods and ResultsEnglish-language peer-reviewed randomized controlled trials comparing the pharmacist-involved multidisciplinary intervention with usual care were included. We searched PubMed, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science, Scopus, and the Cochrane Library from inception through March 2017. Cochrane method for risk of bias was used to assess within and between studies. 18 RCTs (n = 4630) were included for systematic review, and 16 (n = 4447) for meta-analysis. Meta-analysis showed a significant reduction in HF hospitalizations {odds ratio (OR) 0.72 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.55-0.93], P = .01, I2 = 39%} but no effect on HF mortality. Similarly, a significant reduction in all-cause hospitalizations [OR 0.76, 95% CI (0.60-0.96), P = .02, I2 = 52%] but no effect on all-cause mortality was revealed. The overall trend was an improvement in medication adherence. There were significant improvements in HF knowledge (P<.05), but no significant improvements were found on health care costs and self-care.ConclusionsThe pharmacist is a vital member of a multidisciplinary team in HF management to improve clinical outcomes. There was a great deal of variability about which specific intervention is most effective in improving clinical outcomes.  相似文献   

18.
BackgroundThe steady increase in the number of people suffering from chronic diseases and increasing life expectancy raises new demands on health care. At the same time, the need for informal caregivers is increasing. This study aims to perform a systematic review of the methodologies used to identify effect of different types of training on informal caregivers and their older persons.MethodsMEDLINE (PubMed), CINAHL and Ovid were searched from December 2016 and April 2017. The following keywords were used; "informal caregiver", "training" "elderly", older persons". Identified publications were screened by using the following inclusion criteria; systematic reviews, randomized controlled trials, prospective cohort and multicentre studies, English language full text journals, samples or interventions that included caregivers of older persons and published in last 10 years.ResultsTwenty four studies (12 randomised control trials, 8 intervention studies and 4 systematic reviews) were included. Most of the randomized controlled trials involved both caregivers and elderly. Pretests and post-tests were used in intervention studies (5 out of the 8 studies). ICT-based, psychosocial interventions on family caregivers' education program for caregivers were applied. Caregivers following a supportive educative learning had a significantly better quality of life.ConclusionsThe findings of this systematic review suggest that support interventions for caregivers can be effective in reducing caregivers' stress, with a consequent improvement of the quality of care. However, results are based on relatively small studies, reporting somewhat controversial findings supporting the need to perform further research in this field.  相似文献   

19.
BackgroundPatients with heart failure (HF) have not been considered as major beneficiaries of advance directives (ADs). We analyzed factors affecting the preferences for the adoption of ADs by patients with HF and their caregivers.Methods and ResultsSeventy-one patient (mean age: 68 years)–caregiver (mean age: 55 years) dyads were enrolled during clinic visits for routine care at a single institution and completed questionnaires during in-person visits. Cohen's kappa coefficients and generalized estimating equation models were used to analyze the data. The agreement on dyadic perspectives for aggressive treatments was poor or fair, whereas agreement relative to hospice care was moderate (k = 0.42, 95% confidence interval = 0.087–0.754). Both patients and caregivers demonstrated poor knowledge of ADs and similar levels of perceived benefits and barriers to advance care planning. However, the caregivers had more positive attitudes toward ADs than patients. Patients and caregivers who were older and/or males had greater odds of preferring aggressive treatments and/or hospice care. Further, those with depressive symptoms had lower odds of preferring hospice care.ConclusionThe dyadic agreement was moderately high only for hospice care preferences. Both patients and caregivers demonstrated knowledge of shortfalls regarding ADs. Timely AD discussions could increase dyadic agreement and enhance informed and shared decision-making regarding medical care.  相似文献   

20.
PurposeManagement programs for high-risk heart failure (HF) patients reduce admission rates, improve quality of life and survival, and lower costs. These benefits are controversial in elderly patients because these individuals are frequently excluded from the studies. Our aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of disease management programs (DMPs) for HF elderly patients attending a geriatric day care hospital (GDCH) subsequent to hospital discharge.MethodsA randomized prospective study was performed using 117 HF patients who were divided into two groups as follows: 59 patients undergoing an interventional program including health education, therapeutic control, and close follow-up in a GDCH; and 58 patients receiving standard healthcare. Results were measured in terms of event-free survival, where “event” is defined as readmission or mortality for any cause.ResultsThe mean age was 85 years, and 73% of the patients were women. After a year of follow-up, the intervention group had fewer patients with events compared with the control group (27 vs. 38 patients), which indicates a 30% reduction (RR: 2.25; 95% CI: 1.07–4.74; P = 0.032). The probability of having an event between the first visit and the year of follow-up was significantly lower in the intervention group (log-rank: 5.79; P = 0.016). Moreover, the quality of life improved significantly in the intervention group (P = 0.035).ConclusionA developed DMP in a GDCH improves the event-free survival and the quality of life in elderly patients with HF.Trial registrationisrctn.org identifier: ISRCTN10823032.  相似文献   

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