Abstract

IntroductionHeart failure accounts for 1-2% of overall healthcare costs. While the link between re-hospitalization and mortality is unclear, care pathways that standardize inpatient management and establish outpatient follow-up improve patient outcomes and reduce morbidity.AimTo implement a comprehensive interdisciplinary care pathway for heart failure patients with the goal of optimizing inpatient management and improving transitions of care.MethodsTo address this clinical need, New York-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital (NYP-BMH) identified resources needed to optimize patient care, developed an inpatient admission order set (so-called “power plan”), and implemented a multidisciplinary clinical care pathway. The Plan-Do-Study-Act cycle addressed the implementation obstacles. Interdisciplinary rounds guided day-to-day management and addressed barriers. Our team developed a sustainable care pathway, and measured the utilization of pharmacy, nutrition, physical therapy, case management, and social work resources; outpatient appointments were made prior to discharge. We used the Standards for Quality Improvement Reporting Excellence (SQUIRE) 2.0 guidelines to guide our planning and evaluation of this quality improvement initiative.ResultsOur intervention markedly increased the number of heart failure hospitalizations that were identified on admission, and the use of pharmacy/nutrition services was greater after the intervention. The utilization of our “power plan” promoted adherence to a series of evidence-based best practices, but these measures had no significant impact on readmissions as a whole. The involvement of the case management support team increased outpatient appointments made for patients prior to discharge and aided in the transition of care from inpatient to outpatient management.ConclusionThe management of heart failure patients starts in the hospital and continues in the community. Patients who are treated in a standardized dedicated care pathway have reduced morbidity and better outcomes. Identifying these patients early, involving a comprehensive team, and transitioning their care to the outpatient setting improves the quality of care in these patients.

Highlights

  • Heart failure accounts for 1-2% of overall healthcare costs

  • Our intervention markedly increased the number of heart failure hospitalizations that were identified on admission, and the use of pharmacy/nutrition services was greater after the intervention

  • The utilization of our “power plan” promoted adherence to a series of evidence-based best practices, but these measures had no significant impact on readmissions as a whole

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to collect data pre-and postimplementation of a care coordination pathway that optimized heart failure management within our hospital. The purpose of our project was to optimize the management of patients during acute hospitalization and optimize the post-discharge transition of care in heart failure patients. The goal of our project was to coordinate care along the inpatient-outpatient continuum and give access to heart failure patients in the acute-care setting. Rather than focusing on reduced readmission, our aim was to focus on coordination of care, in the acute hospital setting as well as the transition to outpatient care

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