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USA:
Katastrophale Fehlversorgung der Herzpatienten.
Nicht
nur in Deutschland werden zahlreiche Herzpatienten unzureichend
behandelt. Auf der soeben in Orlando, Florida, zu Ende gegangenen
Jahreskongress der American Heart Association (AHA) erhoben Experten
schwere Anklagen gegen ihre Kollegen: obgleich ACE-Hemmer seit
1995 zur Standardtherapie der Herzmuskelschwäche
(Herzinsuffizienz) gehören, verlassen 31% der als ideale
Kandidaten für diese Therapie geltenden Patienten das Krankenhaus
ohne eine entsprechende Verordnung.
Etwa
70% erhalten nicht die in den Therapierichtlinien empfohlenen
genauen Anweisungen für eine optimale Therapie und 69% der
unter einer Herzinsuffizienz leidenden Raucher wurden von den
Ärzten nicht aufgefordert das Rauchen einzustellen.
Es
gibt viele ernstzunehmende Hinweise die die Ansicht einiger Experten
unterstützen, dass die Situation in Deutschland vergleichbar
ist - wenn nicht gar schlimmer. Auch hierzulande erhalten als
Folge der Sparhysterie viele unter Herzinsuffizienz leidende Patienten
keine ACE-Hemmer und nur vergleichsweise wenige Patienten werden
zusätzlich mit den seit einigen Jahren bei Herzinsuffizienz
empfohlenen Betablockern behandelt. Dadurch werden viele Chancen
für eine Heilung oder zumindest deutliche Linderung der Herzschwäche
sinnlos vertan.
Not
All Heart Patients Get Standard Care. Study Finds Doctors Often
Fail to Give Standard Treatment to Heart Failure Patients
ORLANDO,
Fla. Nov. 9 Doctors have known for a decade that drugs called
ACE inhibitors are a cornerstone of care for congestive heart
failure, yet a nationwide survey released Sunday shows that nearly
one-third of patients are sent home from the hospital without
this lifesaving treatment.
The
report documents what many see as a dangerous reality of modern
medicine: Doctors often fail to offer, or simply don't know about,
the most basic elements of care for the many conditions they see
daily.
Just
why doctors do not give patients the treatments experts universally
agree work best is not always clear, although those who study
situation say the reasons probably range from forgetfulness and
haste to simple ignorance.
In
the latest study, Dr. Gregg Fonarow of the University of California,
Los Angeles, looked at how often patients hospitalized with heart
failure are discharged with four standard kinds of care. He found
they are often missing, although this varies widely from hospital
to hospital.
"There
are certain hospitals in the United States where 100 percent of
the patients get this," he said. "There are others where
patients had a better chance of winning the lottery than getting
the indicated care."
More
than 1 million admissions are made each year to U.S. hospitals
for congestive heart failure, which is becoming even more common
as better treatments that help people survive heart attacks leave
them with damaged heart muscle.
Large
studies finished in the early 1990s convinced specialists that
every heart failure patient with a few clearly defined exceptions
should be on widely available drugs called angiotensin converting,
or ACE, inhibitors. The American Heart Association and the American
College of Cardiology included the drugs in their formal treatment
guidelines in 1995, and the Joint Commission on Accreditation
of Healthcare Organizations later agreed.
The
newest survey found that 31 percent of patients considered ideal
candidates for ACE inhibitors are sent home without them. Even
at elite teaching hospitals affiliated with medical schools, more
than one-quarter are not given them.
The
other findings:
72
percent are discharged without receiving a complete set of discharge
instructions, as guidelines recommend.
69
percent of smokers with heart failure are never told to quit.
18
percent do not have the pumping power of their left ventricles
measured, a standard indicator of heart failure.
Fonarow
noted that doctors can bill insurance companies for measuring
ventricle strength but not for writing prescriptions or exhorting
patients to give up smoking.
"I
don't think the public understands the huge degree of variation
between hospitals," he said. "People think if they go
to a good hospital, they will get all the standard things."
He
based his findings on discharge data on 54,639 heart failure patients
at 260 hospitals between October 2001 and January 2003. The registry
is sponsored by Johnson & Johnson's Scios pharmaceutical unit,
which is developing new heart disease treatments. Fonarow presented
the results at the heart association's annual scientific meeting
in Orlando.
Dr.
Richard Pasternak, head of preventive cardiology at Massachusetts
General Hospital, said he believes doctors are actually more likely
to follow standard procedures than they once were.
"Things
are getting better," he said. "The question is why they
aren't getting better faster."
One
approach is to set up systems in hospitals that routinely prompt
doctors to offer all the standard kinds of care when they admit
patients or discharge them. These are like the checklists airline
pilots follow before taking off.
The
heart association recently introduced its "Get with the Guidelines"
program to improve treatment of heart attacks by helping hospitals
establish these checklists.
Dr.
Kenneth LaBresh of MassPRO, the Massachusetts Medical Society's
healthcare quality organization, said the program has already
paid off for the first 123 hospitals to join.
He
presented data at the meeting showing doctors at these hospitals
are more likely to give such accepted treatments for heart attacks
as aspirin, beta blockers and cholesterol drugs.
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