Effectiveness of Remote Patient Monitoring After Discharge of Hospitalized Patients With Heart Failure
University of California, Los Angeles · VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System · +7 more institutions
Abstract
It remains unclear whether telemonitoring approaches provide benefits for patients with heart failure (HF) after hospitalization.
To evaluate the effectiveness of a care transition intervention using remote patient monitoring in reducing 180-day all-cause readmissions among a broad population of older adults hospitalized with HF. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We randomized 1437 patients hospitalized for HF between October 12, 2011, and September 30, 2013, to the intervention arm (715 patients) or to the usual care arm (722 patients) of the Better Effectiveness After Transition-Heart Failure (BEAT-HF) study and observed them for 180 days. The dates of our study analysis were March 30, 2014, to October 1, 2015. The setting was 6 academic medical centers in California. Participants were hospitalized individuals 50 years or older who received active treatment for decompensated HF. INTERVENTIONS: The intervention combined health coaching telephone calls and telemonitoring. Telemonitoring used electronic equipment that collected daily information about blood pressure, heart rate, symptoms, and weight. Centralized registered nurses conducted telemonitoring reviews, protocolized actions, and telephone calls. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was readmission for any cause within 180 days after discharge. Secondary outcomes were all-cause readmission within 30 days, all-cause mortality at 30 and 180 days, and quality of life at 30 and 180 days.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 46.06
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
23- MOMichael OngCorresponding
University of California, Los Angeles, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System
- PSPatrick S. Romano
University of California, Davis
- SESarah Edgington
University of California, Los Angeles
- HAHarriet Aronow
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
- ADAndrew D. Auerbach
University of California, San Francisco
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Heart failure
- Patient discharge
- Intensive care medicine
- Emergency medicine
- Medical emergency
- MEDLINE
- Cardiology
- Good health and well-being