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Transitions of care between acute and chronic heart failure
Critical steps in the design of a multidisciplinary care model for the prevention of rehospitalization
Comín-Colet, J., Enjuanes, C., Lupón, J., Cainzos-Achirica, M., Badosa, N., & Verdú, J. M. (2016). Transitions of care between acute and chronic heart failure: Critical steps in the design of a multidisciplinary care model for the prevention of rehospitalization. Revista Espanola de Cardiologia (English ed.), 69(10), 951-961. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rec.2016.05.001
Despite advances in the treatment of heart failure, mortality, the number of readmissions, and their associated health care costs are very high. Heart failure care models inspired by the chronic care model, also known as heart failure programs or heart failure units, have shown clinical benefits in high-risk patients. However, while traditional heart failure units have focused on patients detected in the outpatient phase, the increasing pressure from hospital admissions is shifting the focus of interest toward multidisciplinary programs that concentrate on transitions of care, particularly between the acute phase and the postdischarge phase. These new integrated care models for heart failure revolve around interventions at the time of transitions of care. They are multidisciplinary and patient-centered, designed to ensure continuity of care, and have been demonstrated to reduce potentially avoidable hospital admissions. Key components of these models are early intervention during the inpatient phase, discharge planning, early postdischarge review and structured follow-up, advanced transition planning, and the involvement of physicians and nurses specialized in heart failure. It is hoped that such models will be progressively implemented across the country.