Reducing heart failure admission rates in England 2004–2011 are not related to changes in primary care quality: national observational study

<p style="text-align:justify;"> <b>Aims:</b> Heart failure (HF) is an important clinical problem. Expert consensus has defined HF as a primary care‐sensitive condition for which the risk of unplanned admissions may be reduced by high quality primary care, but there is li...

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المؤلفون الرئيسيون: Brettell, R, Soljak, M, Cecil, E, Cowie, MR, Tuppin, P, Majeed, A
التنسيق: Journal article
اللغة:English
منشور في: Oxford University Press 2014
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author Brettell, R
Soljak, M
Cecil, E
Cowie, MR
Tuppin, P
Majeed, A
author_facet Brettell, R
Soljak, M
Cecil, E
Cowie, MR
Tuppin, P
Majeed, A
author_sort Brettell, R
collection OXFORD
description <p style="text-align:justify;"> <b>Aims:</b> Heart failure (HF) is an important clinical problem. Expert consensus has defined HF as a primary care‐sensitive condition for which the risk of unplanned admissions may be reduced by high quality primary care, but there is little supporting evidence. We analysed time trends in HF admission rates in England and risk and protective factors for admission.<br/> <b>Methods and results:</b> We used Hospital Episodes Statistics to produce indirectly standardized HF admission counts by general practice for 2004–2011. Clustered negative binomial regression analysis produced admission risk ratios and assessed the significance of potential explanatory covariates. These included population factors (deprivation; HF, coronary heart disease, and smoking prevalence), primary care resourcing [access; general practitioner (GP) supply], and primary care quality (‘Quality and Outcomes Framework’ indicator.) There were 327 756 HF admissions of patients registered with 8405 practices over the study period. There was a significant reduction in admissions over time, from 6.96/100 000 in 2004 to 5.60/100 000 in 2010 (P &lt; 0.001). Deprivation and HF prevalence were risk factors for admission. GP supply and access protected against admission. However, these effects were small and did not explain the large and highly significant annual trend in falling admission rates.<br/> <b>Conclusions:</b> The observed fall in admissions over time cannot be explained by the primary care covariates we included. This analysis suggests that the potential for further significant reduction in emergency HF admissions by improving clinical quality of primary care (as currently measured) may be limited. Further work is required to identify the reasons for the reduction in admissions. </p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:ff8cbf04-b830-4f0c-8d37-eff98848e0b82022-03-27T13:45:48ZReducing heart failure admission rates in England 2004–2011 are not related to changes in primary care quality: national observational studyJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ff8cbf04-b830-4f0c-8d37-eff98848e0b8EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordOxford University Press2014Brettell, RSoljak, MCecil, ECowie, MRTuppin, PMajeed, A <p style="text-align:justify;"> <b>Aims:</b> Heart failure (HF) is an important clinical problem. Expert consensus has defined HF as a primary care‐sensitive condition for which the risk of unplanned admissions may be reduced by high quality primary care, but there is little supporting evidence. We analysed time trends in HF admission rates in England and risk and protective factors for admission.<br/> <b>Methods and results:</b> We used Hospital Episodes Statistics to produce indirectly standardized HF admission counts by general practice for 2004–2011. Clustered negative binomial regression analysis produced admission risk ratios and assessed the significance of potential explanatory covariates. These included population factors (deprivation; HF, coronary heart disease, and smoking prevalence), primary care resourcing [access; general practitioner (GP) supply], and primary care quality (‘Quality and Outcomes Framework’ indicator.) There were 327 756 HF admissions of patients registered with 8405 practices over the study period. There was a significant reduction in admissions over time, from 6.96/100 000 in 2004 to 5.60/100 000 in 2010 (P &lt; 0.001). Deprivation and HF prevalence were risk factors for admission. GP supply and access protected against admission. However, these effects were small and did not explain the large and highly significant annual trend in falling admission rates.<br/> <b>Conclusions:</b> The observed fall in admissions over time cannot be explained by the primary care covariates we included. This analysis suggests that the potential for further significant reduction in emergency HF admissions by improving clinical quality of primary care (as currently measured) may be limited. Further work is required to identify the reasons for the reduction in admissions. </p>
spellingShingle Brettell, R
Soljak, M
Cecil, E
Cowie, MR
Tuppin, P
Majeed, A
Reducing heart failure admission rates in England 2004–2011 are not related to changes in primary care quality: national observational study
title Reducing heart failure admission rates in England 2004–2011 are not related to changes in primary care quality: national observational study
title_full Reducing heart failure admission rates in England 2004–2011 are not related to changes in primary care quality: national observational study
title_fullStr Reducing heart failure admission rates in England 2004–2011 are not related to changes in primary care quality: national observational study
title_full_unstemmed Reducing heart failure admission rates in England 2004–2011 are not related to changes in primary care quality: national observational study
title_short Reducing heart failure admission rates in England 2004–2011 are not related to changes in primary care quality: national observational study
title_sort reducing heart failure admission rates in england 2004 2011 are not related to changes in primary care quality national observational study
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