Telemonitoring in Patients with Heart Failure
Yale University · General Department of Preventive Medicine · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Small studies suggest that telemonitoring may improve heart-failure outcomes, but its effect in a large trial has not been established.
We randomly assigned 1653 patients who had recently been hospitalized for heart failure to undergo either telemonitoring (826 patients) or usual care (827 patients). Telemonitoring was accomplished by means of a telephone-based interactive voice-response system that collected daily information about symptoms and weight that was reviewed by the patients' clinicians. The primary end point was readmission for any reason or death from any cause within 180 days after enrollment. Secondary end points included hospitalization for heart failure, number of days in the hospital, and number of hospitalizations.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 53.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 18
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Confidence interval
- Heart failure
- Clinical endpoint
- Significant difference
- Internal medicine
- Randomized controlled trial
- Emergency medicine
- Good health and well-being