Home visits (HV) are one of the multidisciplinary approaches that has already shown to benefit the follow-up of Heart Failure (HF) patients. It is considered to be one of the most effective and humane approaches as it educates and takes care of the patient in his/her routine environment. In this study, the follow-up of HF patients in a home setting after being discharged from hospital will include the reinforcement, monitoring and re-evaluation of guidelines previously provided about the disease and self-care, compliance to prescribed medicines and, specially, the early recognition of decompensation signs and symptoms by patients and their caregivers.
The epidemiological overview of cardiovascular diseases in which HF turns out to be the main cause of re-hospitalizations in the Unified Health System, which has not changed over the years, impairs the management of the limited resources of the public health system. Additionally, HF leads to substantial damage to the quality of life of patients, many of them at a socially productive age, resulting in early retirements and absences. In this study, the objective is to evaluate the impact of the follow-up of heart failure patients at home, interspersed with telephone contacts, by the nursing team, after hospital discharge, regarding knowledge of the disease, self-care skills and quality of life improvement, compared with the conventional follow-up of patients in a 6-month period without this intervention, as well as to build a mobile-technology computer structure to make the use of cardiology nursing evaluation forms viable; correlate sociodemographic and clinical characteristics with treatment compliance and re-hospitalization rates in both; and ascertain home follow-up costs. With this purpose, a two-center randomized clinical trial, blinded for the endpoints re-hospitalization and costs, was designed.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
200
There will provided education about what is heart failure, its causes, how to recognize signs and symptoms, monitoring of weight and blood pressure, the importance of compliance to treatment. Patients will be instructed about the medications; a guide to rest and exercise, sexual activity, vaccines, travel and diet will be provided. The involvement of the family will be encouraged; the contact with the team should be done when: patient observes an increase of 1 or 2 kg of weight in 2-3 days, worsening of dyspnea on effort, edema in legs / abdomen, worsening of cough, persistent vomiting, syncope, sputum with blood, fever, persistent tachycardia. In phone calls made between home visits, the compliance to treatment will be evaluated and reinforced.
Knowledge of the disease
This primary outcome will be measured at each home visit, which will have different intervals, according to the research protocol.
Time frame: Home visit 7 days after discharge
Self-care skills.
This primary outcome will be measured at each home visit, which will have different intervals, according to the research protocol.
Time frame: Home visit 7 days after discharge.
Quality of Life
This primary outcome will be measured at each home visit, which will have different intervals, according to the research protocol.
Time frame: Home visit 7 days after discharge
Changes in functional class.
This secundary outcome will be measured at each visit and phone call, which will have different intervals, according to the research protocol.
Time frame: Home visits (HV) starting 7days after discharge.
Presentation to emergency department
This secundary outcome will be measured at each visit and phone call, which will have different intervals, according to the research protocol.
Time frame: Home visits starting 7 days after discharge.
Compliance score.
This secundary outcome will be measured at each visit and phone call, which will have different intervals, according to the research protocol.
Time frame: Home visits starting 7 days after discharge.
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