Cardiovascular medicine
Social deprivation increases cardiac hospitalisations
in chronic heart failure independent of disease severity and
diuretic non-adherence
A D Struthersa, G Andersonb, P T Donnanb, T MacDonaldb
a Department
of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee
DD1 9SY, UK, b Medicines
Monitoring Unit, Ninewells Hospital
Correspondence to: Professor Struthers
Accepted 16 August 1999
OBJECTIVE
To examine whether social deprivation has any
independent effect on emergency cardiac hospitalisations in patients
with chronic heart failure (CHF).
DESIGN
Cohort study of 478 patients with CHF who had been
hospitalised before 1993 and who were followed up during 1993 and 1994.
SETTING
Emergency admissions within Tayside acute hospitals.
PATIENTS
478 CHF patients who had a previous myocardial
infarction, a previous CHF admission, and were on diuretic treatment.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Emergency hospital admissions are
divided into those for all causes and those for cardiac causes only.
RESULTS
Social deprivation was significantly associated
with an increase in the number of cardiac hospitalisations
(p = 0.007). This effect was mainly caused by increasing the
proportion of patients hospitalised in each deprivation category (26%
in deprivation category 1-2 versus 40% in deprivation category 5-6,
p = 0.03). This effect of deprivation was independent of disease
severity, as judged by the dose of prescribed diuretic, the death rate, and the duration of each hospital stay. Non-adherence with diuretic treatment could not account for these findings either.
CONCLUSIONS
Social deprivation increases the chance of a
CHF patient being rehospitalised independently of disease severity.
Possible explanations are that doctors who look after socially deprived patients have a lower threshold for cardiac hospitalisation of their
patients, or that social deprivation alters the way a CHF patient
accesses medical care during decompensation. Understanding how social
deprivation influences both doctor and patient behaviour in the
prehospital phase is now crucial in order to reduce the amplifying
effect that social deprivation appears to have on cardiac hospitalisations.
Keywords: chronic heart failure; hospitalisations; social deprivation
© 2000 by Heart
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