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Current discharge management of acute coronary syndromes: baseline results from a national quality improvement initiative

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 03:47 authored by Wai, A, Pulver, LK, Oliver, K, Angus ThompsonAngus Thompson
Background: Evidence–practice gaps exist in the continuum of care for patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS), particularly at hospital discharge. Aim: We aimed to describe the methodology and baseline results of the Discharge Management of Acute Coronary Syndromes (DMACS) project, focusing on the prescription of guideline-recommended medications, referral to cardiac rehabilitation and communication between the hospital, patient and their primary healthcare professionals. Methods: DMACS employed Drug Use Evaluation methodology involving data collection,evaluation and feedback, and targeted educational interventions. Adult patients with ACS discharged during a 4-month period were eligible to participate. Data were collected (maximum 50 patients) at each site through an inpatient medical record review, a general practitioner (GP) postal/fax survey conducted 14 days post discharge and a patient telephone survey 3 months post discharge. Results: Forty-nine hospitals participated in the audit recruiting 1545 patients. At discharge, 57% of patients were prescribed a combination of antiplatelet agent(s), beta-blocker, statin and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and/or angiotensin II-antagonist. At 3 months post discharge, 48% of patients reported using the same combination. Some 67% of patients recalled being referred to cardiac rehabilitation; of these, 33% had completed the programme. In total, 83% of patients had a documented ACS management plan at discharge. Of these, 90% included a medication list, 56% a chest pain action plan and 54% risk factor modification advice. Overall, 65% of GPs rated the quality of information received in the discharge summary as ‘very good’ to ‘excellent’. Conclusions: The findings of our baseline audit showed that despite the robust evidence base and availability of national guidelines, the management of patients with ACS can be improved. These findings will inform a multifaceted intervention strategy to improve adherence to guidelines for the discharge management of patients with ACS.

History

Publication title

Internal Medicine Journal

Volume

42

Issue

5

Pagination

e53-e59

ISSN

1444-0903

Department/School

School of Pharmacy and Pharmacology

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia

Place of publication

155 Cremorne St, Richmond, VIC 3121 Australia

Rights statement

Copyright 2010 the authors and Royal Australasian College of Physicians.

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Clinical health not elsewhere classified

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