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Title

Norton Scale Score and long-term healthcare services utilization after acute myocardial infarction.

Authors

Plakht, Ygal; Silber, Hagar; Shiyovich, Arthur; Arbelle, Jonathan Eli; Greenberg, Dan; Gilutz, Harel

Abstract

Aims Many patients admitted with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) have considerable multimorbidity, sometimes associated with functional limitations. The Norton Scale Score (NSS) evaluates clinical aspects of well-being and predicts numerous clinical outcomes. We evaluated the association between NSS and long-term healthcare utilization (HU) following a non-fatal AMI. Methods and results A retrospective observational study including AMI survivors during 1 January 2004 to 31 December 2015 with a filled NSS report. Data were recouped from the electronic medical records of the hospital and two Health Maintenance Organizations. Norton Scale Score ≤16 or >16 was defined as low or high respectively. The outcome was annual HU, encompassing length of hospital stay (LOS), emergency department (ED) visits, primary care, and other ambulatory service utilization during up to 10 years of follow-up. HU costs were compared between groups. Two-level models were built: unadjusted and adjusted for patients' baseline characteristics. The study included 4613 patients, 784 (17%) had low NSS. Patients with low NSS compared with patients with high NSS were older, had a higher rate of multimorbidity, and had significantly lower coronary angiography and revascularization rates. In addition, low NSS patients presented higher annual HU costs (4879 vs. 3634 Euro, P <0.001), primarily due to LOS, ED visits, and less frequent ambulatory services usage. Conclusion In patients after non-fatal AMI, low NSS is a signal for higher long-term costs reflecting the presence of expensive comorbidities. Management disparity and impaired mobility may offset the real need of these patients. Therefore, the specific proactive nursing intervention in that population is recommended.

Subjects

LENGTH of stay in hospitals; SCIENTIFIC observation; CONFIDENCE intervals; PSYCHOLOGY of cardiac patients; MYOCARDIAL infarction; MEDICAL care costs; RETROSPECTIVE studies; MEDICAL care use; T-test (Statistics); DESCRIPTIVE statistics; RESEARCH funding; DATA analysis software

Publication

European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, 2022, Vol 21, Issue 7, p702

ISSN

1474-5151

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1093/eurjcn/zvac011

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