학술논문

Can Timely Outpatient Visits Reduce Readmissions and Mortality Among Heart Failure Patients?
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Journal of General Internal Medicine. :1-9
Subject
heart failure
outpatient follow-up
readmissions
co-morbidities
singapore
time-dependent bias
Language
English
ISSN
0884-8734
1525-1497
Abstract
Background: Outpatient follow-up after a hospital discharge may reduce the risk of readmissions, but existing evidence has methodological limitations.Objectives: To assess effect of outpatient follow-up within 7, 14, 21 and 30 days of a hospital discharge on 30-day unplanned readmissions or mortality among heart failure (HF) patients; and whether this varies for patients with different clinical complexities.Design: We analyzed medical records between January 2016 and December 2021 from a prospective cohort study. Using time varying mixed effects parametric survival models, we examined the association between not having an outpatient follow-up and risk of adverse events. We used interaction models to assess if the effect of outpatient follow-up visit on outcomes varies with patients’ clinical complexity (comorbidities, grip strength, cognitive impairment and length of inpatient stay).Participants: Two hundred and forty-one patients with advanced HF.Main Measures: 30-day all-cause (or cardiac) adverse event defined as all cause (or cardiac) unplanned readmissions or death within 30 days of an unplanned all-cause (or cardiac) admission or emergency department visit.Key Results: We analyzed 1595 all-cause admissions, inclusive of 1266 cardiac admissions. Not having an outpatient follow-up (vs having an outpatient follow-up) significantly increased the risk of 30-day all-cause adverse event. (risk [95% CI] – 14 days: 35.1 [84.5,-1.1]; 21 days: 43.9 [48.2,6.7]; 30 days: 31.1 [48.5, 7.9]) The risk (at 21 days) was higher for those with one co-morbidity (0.25 [0.11,0.58]), mild (0.67 [0.45, 1.00]) and moderate cognitive impairment (0.38 [0.17, 0.84]), normal grip strength (0.57 [0.34, 0.96]) and length of inpatient stay 7–13 days (0.45 [0.23, 0.89]).Conclusion: Outpatient follow-up within 30 days after a hospital discharge reduced risk of 30-day adverse events among HF patients, the benefit varying according to clinical complexity. Results suggest the need to prioritize patients who benefit from outpatient follow-up for these visits.