Efforts to improve post-myocardial infarction care in hospitals are succeeding but guidelines are less frequently used with female patients
Efforts to improve post-myocardial infarction
care in hospitals are succeeding, but the guidelines are less frequently
used with female patients, according to a presentation at the annual
meeting of the American College of Cardiology.
In the current work, American researchers
analyzed records from 2,857 myocardial infarction survivors treated
at Michigan hospitals before and after a major quality improvement
effort took place. They found a significant difference between treatment
women received before and after the effort and that received by
men. The increased use of proven medications, for example, was much
more pronounced in men.
Overall, both men and women treated in the
four months after the quality effort began had a better chance for
survival at one year after their hospital stay ended. But women
didn’t get as much of a mortality reduction benefit as men.
That difference may be in part because women
patients were less likely than men to have a one-on-one session
with doctors or nurses before they went home, to help them understand
and “take charge” of the medicines and lifestyle changes that could
improve their health. Both men and women who had this session, and
signed a discharge contract with their doctors and nurses that included
a pledge to stick to treatment and follow-up appointments, lived
longer than those who didn’t.
“We’re troubled by the gender differences we found, though we remain
encouraged by the overall effect of post-heart attack quality improvement
efforts,” said lead researcher Kim Eagle, MD.
Eagle is co-director of the Guidelines Applied
in Practice (GAP) Project in Michigan. GAP is a project of the ACC
that aims to help hospitals deliver proven medications, tests, and
advice on diet, exercise, smoking cessation and weight loss to all
patients.
At last year’s ACC meeting, Eagle and his
colleagues reported that the GAP project resulted in a 25 percent
lower risk of dying within a year of leaving the hospital among
heart attack patients whose doctors and nurses followed standard
national guidelines for their care, and used the discharge tool
and contract. This major effect on mortality rates was the first
evidence that standardized heart care saves lives.
GAP tries to increase hospitals’ use of aspirin
and beta blocker drugs, and cholesterol testing, within 24 hours
of a myocardial infarction, and the prescribing of aspirin, beta
blockers, cholesterol-lowering drugs and angiotensin-converting
enzyme inhibitor drugs for patients leaving the hospital. It also
seeks to increase the number of patients who get counseling about
diet and smoking before they leave the hospital.
Sandeep Jani, MPH, the researcher who presented
the results, notes that on the whole, men treated after the quality
effort were more likely to receive pre-discharge prescriptions for
all four classes of recommended heart medications than were women.
The quality effort significantly improved the use of only two of
the drugs - beta blockers and aspirin - in women.
The new analysis showing differences in the
delivery of care to women and men, even after the quality improvement
effort, raises an important question of how hospitals implement
quality measures.
Although the new data do not give insights
into the factors that caused the gender difference, Jani and Eagle
noted that the female patients were on average older and more seriously
ill, with more co-existing health problems, than the male patients.
This fits the known pattern of heart disease among women, who tend
to develop the condition and its effects later in life. Cardiovascular
disease is the number one killer of both men and women.
Some previous studies by other researchers
have found that doctors are less likely to deliver evidence-based
medical care ? the foundation of quality improvement efforts like
GAP ? to women compared with men. But the new study is the first
to show a correlation between this failure and mortality.
“We owe women heart attack patients a full
examination of the factors that might lead them to receive fewer
of the proven drugs and lifestyle tips than men receive,” said Eagle.
“Now that we know that they get just as much mortality benefit as
men when quality standards are applied to their care, we must find
ways to ensure that they are all treated according to those standards.”
|