Patient Information

Palliative care boosts heart failure patient outcomes


 

Systematic introduction of palliative care interventions for patients with advanced heart failure improved patients’ quality of life and spurred their development of advanced-care preferences in a pair of independently performed, controlled pilot studies. But, despite demonstrating the ability of palliative-care interventions to help heart failure patients during their final months of life, the findings raised questions about the generalizability and reproducibility of palliative-care interventions that may depend upon the skills and experience of the individual specialists who deliver the care. To learn more about these 2 studies, go to Family Practice News: http://www.mdedge.com/familypracticenews/article/115737/cardiology/palliative-care-boosts-heart-failure-patient-outcomes.

Recommended Reading

Study links low diastolic blood pressure to myocardial damage, coronary heart disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Joint European atrial fibrillation guidelines break new ground
MDedge Family Medicine
Guideline: Supplemental, dietary calcium both heart safe
MDedge Family Medicine
TOPCAT, a third time around
MDedge Family Medicine
Ezetimibe’s ACS benefit centers on high-risk, post-CABG patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Advanced heart failure symptoms linked to mortality
MDedge Family Medicine
MIs in pregnancy have worse prognosis
MDedge Family Medicine
Mediterranean diet for secondary prevention cuts all-cause mortality
MDedge Family Medicine
Adaptive servo ventilation cuts atrial fib burden
MDedge Family Medicine
Rivaroxaban linked to more bleeding compared with dabigatran in elderly patients with nonvalvular AF
MDedge Family Medicine