reviewAnnals of Internal MedicineMay 26, 2014GREEN OA

Transitional Care Interventions to Prevent Readmissions for Persons With Heart Failure

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · University of Colorado Denver · +1 more institution

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Nearly 25% of patients hospitalized with heart failure (HF) are readmitted within 30 days. PURPOSE: To assess the efficacy, comparative effectiveness, and harms of transitional care interventions to reduce readmission and mortality rates for adults hospitalized with HF. DATA SOURCES: MEDLINE, Cochrane Library, CINAHL, ClinicalTrials.gov, and World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (1 January 1990 to late October 2013). STUDY SELECTION: Two reviewers independently selected randomized, controlled trials published in English reporting a readmission or mortality rate within 6 months of an index hospitalization. DATA EXTRACTION: One reviewer extracted data, and another checked accuracy. Two reviewers assessed risk of bias and graded strength of evidence (SOE). DATA SYNTHESIS: Forty-seven trials were included. Most enrolled adults with moderate to severe HF and a mean age of 70 years. Few trials reported 30-day readmission rates. At 30 days, a high-intensity home-visiting program reduced all-cause readmission and the composite end point (all-cause readmission or death; low SOE). Over 3 to 6 months, home-visiting programs and multidisciplinary heart failure (MDS-HF) clinic interventions reduced all-cause readmission (high SOE). Home-visiting programs reduced HF-specific readmission and the composite end point (moderate SOE). Structured telephone support (STS) interventions reduced HF-specific readmission (high SOE) but not all-cause readmissions (moderate SOE). Home-visiting programs, MDS-HF clinics, and STS interventions produced a mortality benefit. Neither telemonitoring nor primarily educational interventions reduced readmission or mortality rates.

Limitations

Few trials reported 30-day readmission rates. Usual care was heterogeneous and sometimes not adequately described.

Citation impact

676
total citations
FWCI
39.33
Percentile
100%
References
79
Citations per year

Authors

10

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Psychological intervention
  • CINAHL
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Emergency medicine
  • Heart failure
  • MEDLINE
  • Clinical trial
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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Funding