Does a high-quality multicomponent continuum of care improve 1-year survival in patients with acute myocardial infarction?
Adherence to a high-quality multicomponent continuum of care—from rapid emergency response to high-performing hospital treatment and complete post-discharge medical therapy—significantly improves 1-year survival after acute myocardial infarction.
BACKGROUND: The relationship between guideline adherence and outcomes in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) has been widely investigated considering the emergency, acute, post-acute phases separately, but the effectiveness of the whole care process is not known. AIM: The study aim was to evaluate the effect of the multicomponent continuum of care on 1-year survival after AMI. METHODS: We conducted a cohort study selecting all incident cases of AMI from health information systems during 2011-2014 in the Lazio region. Patients' clinical history was defined by retrieving previous hospitalizations and drugs prescriptions. For each subject the probability to reach the hospital and the conditional probabilities to survive to 30 days from admission and to 31-365 days post discharge were estimated through multivariate logistic models. The 1-year survival probability was calculated as the product of the three probabilities. Quality of care indicators were identified in terms of emergency timeliness (time between residence and the nearest hospital), hospital performance in treatment of acute phase (number/timeliness of PCI on STEMI) and drug therapy in post-acute phase (number of drugs among antiplatelet, β-blockers, ACE inhibitors/ARBs, statins). The 1-year survival Probability Ratio (PR) and its Bootstrap Confidence Intervals (BCI) between who were exposed to the highest level of quality of care (timeliness85 years. For patients with diabetes and COPD a slight increase in PRs was also observed. CONCLUSIONS: The 1-year survival probability post AMI depends strongly on the quality of the whole multicomponent continuum of care. Improving the performance in the different phases, taking into account the relationship among these, can lead to considerable saving of lives, in particular for the elderly and for subjects with chronic diseases.
Ventura et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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