Document details

conTemporary reflectiOns regarding heart failure manaGEmenT – How to ovERcome the PorTuguese barriers (TOGETHER-PT)

Author(s): Silva-Cardoso, José ; Santos, Jonathan ; Araújo, Inês ; Andrade, Aurora ; Morais Sarmento, Pedro ; Santos, Paulo ; Moura, Brenda ; Marques, Irene ; Peres, Marisa ; Ferreira, João Pedro ; Agostinho, João R. ; Pimenta, Joana

Date: 2024

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10451/64633

Origin: Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa

Subject(s): Internal medicine; Primary healthcare; Nursing awareness; Diagnosis; Treatment; Healthcare organization; Portugal


Description

Introduction and objectives: Heart failure (HF) is a complex clinical syndrome that is a significant burden in hospitalisations, morbidity, and mortality. Although a significant effort has been made to better understand its consequences and current barriers in its management, there are still several gaps to address. The present work aimed to identify the views of a multidisciplinary group of health care professionals on HF awareness and literacy, diagnosis, treatment and organization of care, identifying current challenges and providing insights into the future. Methods: A steering committee was established, including members of the Heart Failure Study Group of the Portuguese Society of Cardiology (GEIC-SPC), the Heart Failure Study Group of the Portuguese Society of Internal Medicine (NEIC-SPMI) and the Cardiovascular Study Group (GEsDCard) of the Portuguese Association of General and Family Medicine (APMGF). This steering committee produced a 16-statement questionnaire regarding different HF domains that was answered to by a diversified group of 152 cardiologists, internists, general practitioners, and nurses with an interest or dedicated to HF using a five-level Likert scale. Full agreement was defined as ≥80% of level 5 (fully agree) responses. Results: Globally, consensus was achieved in all but one of the 16 statements. Full agreement was registered in seven statements, namely 3 of 4 statements for patient education and HF awareness and 2 in 4 statements of both HF diagnosis and healthcare organization, with proportions of fully agree responses ranging from 82.9% to 96.7%. None of the HF treatment statements registered full agreement but 3 of 4 achieved ≥80% of level 4 (agree) responses. Conclusion: This document aims to be a call-to-action to improve HF patients' quality of life and prognosis, by promoting a change in HF care in Portugal.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
Contributor(s) Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto da ULisboa
CC Licence
facebook logo  linkedin logo  twitter logo 
mendeley logo

Related documents

No related documents