Heart failure patients benefit from pharmacist care
Health is a unity and harmony within the mind, body and spirit which is unique to each person, and is as defined by that person. The level of wellness or health is, in part, determined by the ability to deal with and defend against stress. Health is determined by physiological, psychological, socio-cultural, spiritual, and developmental stage variables.
logo - spiritindia - Heart failure patients benefit from pharmacist care
Home | Cancer | Therapies | Diet | Herbs | Heart | Skin | Cosmetic Surgery | Arthritis | Allergies | Eyes | GIT

Heart failure patients benefit from pharmacist care

Heart Failure :: Heart failure patients benefit from pharmacist care

Heart Failure :: Heart failure patients benefit from pharmacist care

Heart-failure patients take their medicine more reliably when under the care of a pharmacist, resulting in fewer emergency-room visits and hospital stays as well as lower health-care costs, according to a study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Pharmacy.

The American Heart Association says more than 5 million people in the United States are in various stages of heart failure with total health-care costs exceeding $29 billion.

The UNC study, published in the May 15, 2007 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine, included 314 low-income patients with heart failure. They were placed into two groups: one received typical services from a pharmacist; the other received care from a specially trained pharmacist who had access to customized educational materials, provided comprehensive instruction to participants and reminded them to refill their prescriptions.

"For every $1 we spent on the intervention group, the health-care system gained $14 in savings by decreasing emergency-room visits and hospitalization," said Michael D. Murray, the Mescal S. Ferguson Distinguished Professor at the UNC School of Pharmacy and lead author of the study.

Compared to patients in the control group, those who received special intervention:

took their medications 16 percent more consistently, visited the emergency room and were hospitalized 19 percent less, and had direct annual health-care costs nearly $3,000 lower per patient.

"The key to the success of our intervention was taking time with patients to create a regular schedule for taking their medicines that fit their lifestyle," said James Young, the intervention pharmacist involved in the study.

"We made sure that patients understood how their medications worked and why taking them consistently was so important," said Young, a research pharmacist with Wishard Health Services in Indianapolis and a co-author of the study.

The study investigators created special patient-specific materials designed to help patients with lower levels of health literacy. For example, heart patients taking an ACE inhibitor received their pills in a bottle marked with an ace of hearts sticker. A corresponding information sheet, designed to be easy to read and understand, was also marked with the ace-of-hearts.

(Heart Failure :: Heart failure patients benefit from pharmacist care published at SpiritIndia on Tuesday, May 15, 2007)

Search more information on Heart Failure

Recently posted related articles on Heart Failure :

  1. Heart Failure :: Men with chronic heart failure can have active sex lives
  2. Heart Failure :: ICDs underused in women, minorities with heart failure
  3. Heart Failure :: Drug used for treatment for heart failure in adults may not be beneficial for children and teens
  4. Leukemia :: Heart failure is rare among leukemia patients on imatinib
  5. Heart Failure :: Rasilez, direct renin inhibitor, reduces a marker of heart failure severity
  6. Diabetes :: Boxed warning on heart failure risk on diabetes drug label, says FDA
  7. Heart Failure :: High blood pressure, low energy may cause heart failure
  8. Heart Failure :: Novel candidate biomarker for heart failure also strongly predicts risk of death
  9. Heart :: Cause and treatment of pediatric heart failure
  10. Diabetes :: GlaxoSmithKline statement in diabetes care study thiazolidinediones and heart failure

»»   Macular Degeneration :: Higher intake of fish and vitamin D levels linked to lower risk of age-related macular disease
««   Ecology :: K-State to collaborate on research to forecast ecological consequences of environmental changes

Tools
Daily calorie need
Homeo tips
Homeo softwares
Associations
NHMC Alumni
IFH
PHS
Vital Informer
Articles & news
Education
Homeo articles
Homeopathy cases
Homeopathic Remedies
You
Authors
Submit article
Your account
Testimonials
About
About us
Advertisers
Advertising
Linking us
Disclaimer
Privacy policy

The information provided on SpiritIndia.com is designed to support, not replace, the relationship that exists between a patient/site visitor and his/her physician. We comply with the HONcode principles for trustworthy health information.
Health, Business, Science, Sports, Entertainment, Technology
©2002-2009 SpiritIndia.com