PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Perceived symptoms as the primary indicators for 30-day heart failure readmission.

  • Kelley M Anderson,
  • Dottie Murphy,
  • Hunter Groninger,
  • Paul Kolm,
  • Haijun Wang,
  • Vera Barton-Maxwel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0267820
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
p. e0267820

Abstract

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BackgroundTo identify 30-day rehospitalizations in patients discharged with heart failure (HF) based on clinical indications, physiologic measures and symptoms.MethodsFifty-six patients with heart failure participated. After discharge to home, clinical indicators of dyspnea, fatigue, orthopnea, dyspnea with exertion, daily weight, edema, heart rate, blood pressure, mental condition, medication adherence, and overall well-being were reported by participants daily for up to 30 days.ResultsJoint modeling of longitudinal and time-to-event approach was applied to assess the association of readmission with longitudinal measurements. There was no association between demographic, physiological, or laboratory variables and re-hospitalization within 30 days post discharge. Perceptions of dyspnea (p = .012) and feeling unwell (p ConclusionPerceived measures, particularly dyspnea and feeling unwell were more important factors than demographic, physiological, or laboratory parameters in predicting 30-day rehospitalizations in this racially diverse cohort. The symptomatic experience of heart failure is an important indicator of rehospitalization.