A Comprehensive Management System for Heart Failure Improves Clinical Outcomes and Reduces Medical Resource Utilization

1997 
Abstract The effectiveness of heart failure management in clinical practice is limited by physicians' suboptimal utilization of effective medications, patients' poor adherence to dietary sodium limitation and optimal drug therapy, and the lack of systematic monitoring of patients after hospitalization. The present study evaluated the feasibility and safety of MULTIFIT, a physician-supervised, nurse-mediated, home-based system for heart failure management that implements consensus guidelines for pharmacologic and dietary therapy using a nurse manager to enhance dietary and pharmacologic adherence and to monitor clinical status by frequent telephone contact. Fifty-one patients with the clinical diagnosis of heart failure were followed for 138 ± 44 days. Daily dietary sodium intake fell by 38%, from 3,393 to 2,088 mg (p = 0.0001); average daily medication doses increased significantly (lisinopril: 17 to 23 mg, p
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    29
    References
    331
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []