Length of stay in patients admitted for acute heart failure

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2016-05-01

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Martin-Sanchez, Francisco Javier
Carbajosa, Virginia
Llorens, Pere
Herrero, Pablo
Jacob, Javier
Miro, Oscar
Fernandez, Cristina
Bueno, Hector
Calvo, Elpidio
Ribera Casado, Jose Manuel

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Elsevier
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Abstract

Objective: To identify the factors associated with prolonged length of hospital stay in patients admitted for acute heart failure.Methods: Multipurpose observational cohort study including patients from the EAHFE registry admitted for acute heart failure in 25 Spanish hospitals. Data were collected on demographic and clinical variables and on the day and place of admission. The primary outcome was length of hospital stay longer than the median.Results: We included 2,400 patients with a mean age of 79.5 (9.9) years; of these, 1,334 (55.6%) were women. Five hundred and ninety (24.6%) were admitted to the short stay unit (SSU), 606 (25.2%) to cardiology, and 1,204 (50.2%) to internal medicine or gerontology. The mean length of hospital stay was 7.0 (RIC 4-11) days. Fifty-eight (2.4%) patients died and 562 (23.9%) were readmitted within 30 days after discharge. The factors associated with prolonged length of hospital stay were chronic pulmonary disease; being a device carrier; having an unknown or uncommon triggering factor; the presence of renal insufficiency, hyponatremia and anaemia in the emergency department; not being admitted to an SSU or the lack of this facility in the hospital; and being admitted on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday. The factors associated with length of hospital stay

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Heart failure, Stay length, Admission, European-society, Outcomes, Hospitalization, Epidemiology, Guidelines, Trends, Association, Predictors, Cardiology, Spain

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