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Elderly Alcoholics Receive Equal Heart Attack Care
in Hospitals
Jan. 4, 2006 – Despite what many may assume, senior
citizens with alcohol problems do not get worse treatment than their
sober peers when they are hospitalized for a heart attack, according to
new research on Medicare patients across the U.S.
Alcoholic patients were less likely than sober
patients to receive beta-blocker drugs when they were discharged from
the hospital, but there were no other significant treatment differences
between the two groups. The study is published in the latest issue of
the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research.
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"Alcohol-related diagnoses are not a barrier to
receiving most quality of care measures in elderly patients
hospitalized" for heart attack, David Fiellin, M.D., of Yale University
School of Medicine and colleagues conclude.
The encouraging finding "speaks to the fact that
there have been significant efforts across the board, in medicine in
general, to monitor the provision of quality care," Fiellin said.
However, the researchers also note that the
"overall provision of quality of care indicators was low," when measured
across all patients.
Fiellin and colleagues analyzed data for 155,026
Medicare patients age 65 and older admitted to a hospital with a heart
attack. Only 1,284 of these patients also had an alcohol-related
diagnosis on their medical records.
The researchers then compared the care that the
patients received with seven quality guidelines for heart attack
treatment, including the use of beta-blocker and ACE inhibitor drugs,
aspirin, angioplasty and advice to quit smoking.
With the exception of beta-blockers prescribed upon
release from the hospital, patients with an alcohol diagnosis fared no
worse than their peers in terms of getting guideline care.
Fiellin and colleagues began their study with the
thought that elderly adults diagnosed with an alcohol abuse problem
could be a "vulnerable population" that might receive substandard
treatment in the hospitals.
"I think that concern was that, as we know,
patients who have mental health diagnoses can experience some level of
stigma when they enter the health care system," Fiellin said.
Earlier studies by some of Fiellin's co-authors
found that patients with mental disorders, including substance abuse,
were less likely to get heart procedures such as certain types of bypass
and angioplasty surgeries.
Age may also play an unwelcome discriminating
factor in what kind of care certain patients receive, as Canadian
researchers showed earlier this year. Shaohua Wang, M.D., a clinical
professor of cardiac surgery at the University of Alberta, said that
more than half of hospitals in North America who offer transplants use
age as one of their criteria to screen out individuals for transplant.
However, the Alberta study showed that patients
aged 60 and older did just as well as younger patients after receiving a
heart transplant.
"There are many factors involved in determining who
is and who isn't an appropriate candidate for a heart transplant, but
this study clearly shows that age should not be one of those factors,"
Wang said.
About Source:
Original story by Becky Ham, Science Writer,
Health Behavior News Service
The Fiellin study was sponsored by the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Fiellin DA, et al. Quality of care for acute
myocardial infarction in elderly patients with alcohol-related
diagnoses. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research 30(1), 2006.
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