Download Heart Failure Clinical Process Guideline Deborah Ayers, RN, MSN Quality Improvement Nurse

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Saturated fat and cardiovascular disease wikipedia , lookup

Cardiovascular disease wikipedia , lookup

Remote ischemic conditioning wikipedia , lookup

Lutembacher's syndrome wikipedia , lookup

Angina wikipedia , lookup

Cardiac contractility modulation wikipedia , lookup

Electrocardiography wikipedia , lookup

Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia wikipedia , lookup

Rheumatic fever wikipedia , lookup

Antihypertensive drug wikipedia , lookup

Coronary artery disease wikipedia , lookup

Quantium Medical Cardiac Output wikipedia , lookup

Congenital heart defect wikipedia , lookup

Dextro-Transposition of the great arteries wikipedia , lookup

Heart failure wikipedia , lookup

Heart arrhythmia wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Heart Failure Clinical Process
Guideline
Deborah Ayers, RN, MSN
Quality Improvement Nurse
Consultant
General Information
“Optional” Best Practice Tool
 Effective date for usage
 Electronic copies of the tool are
available on the website
 http://michigan.gov/bhs; click
“Best Practice Information &
Guidelines”

Clinical Advisory Panel
Deborah Ayers RN, MSN - State
QI Nurse
 Chris Glue- Restorative CNA Dimondale, Lansing
 Teresa Gurny, RN/DON Medilodge of Howell
 Dr. Steve Levenson- Geriatrician Baltimore, Maryland

Clinical Advisory Panel (cont.)




Sue Mangan - Pharmacist/Surveyor Metro West Team
Julie Savage, RN, MSN – Eden CMCF
Nancy Wong, RN, BSN - ADON/Inservice Director/Woodward Hills NC
Barbara Zabitz RD/Surveyor - Metro
West Team
Guideline Format





Basic Care Process
Steps
Expectations of
facilities related to
steps
Rationale for
expectations
Documentation Check
list
Relevant Tables
Heart Failure

A constellation of
signs/symptoms
that result from
the inability of
the heart to pump
blood to the body
at a rate the
body needs.
Care Process Steps
It always begins with an
“Assessment”
Assessment

Residents with
history/or risk
factors for heart
failure





Transfer data
Labs, EKG, echo,
chest film
Anemia, COPD,
other lung
diseases
Previous treatment
Hospitalization for
heart failure.
Assess Risk Factors





Coronary artery
disease
Angina/infarction
Chronic
hypertension
Idiopathic dilated
cardiomyopathy
Valvular heart
disease




Arrhythmia
Anemia
Fluid volume
overload with
noncardiac causes
Thyroid disease
New admissions with CHF

Look for signs and symptoms

Diagnostic test results

Document the findings
Staff and practitioner . . .
identify
The severity and
consequences of
heart failure
Myocardial Dysfunction


Systolic Dysfunction
Left ventricle has
reduced muscle
contractility



Diastolic
Decreased left
ventricular filling
Caused by ventricular
stiffness, decreased
rate of relaxation, or
rapid heart rate
Functional Assessment
Class I
No limitations of physical
activity. No shortness of
breath, fatigue, or heart
palpitations with ordinary
physical activity.
 Class II
Slight limitation of
physical activity. SOB,
fatigue, heart
palpitations. Patient
comfortable at rest.



Class III
Symptoms with minimal
exertion. SOB, fatigue,
heart palpitations.
Patients comfortable at
rest.
 Class IV
Severe to complete
limitation of activity.
SOB, fatigue, heart
palpitations, even at rest.



American College of Cardiology
American Heart Association

Stage A

Stage B

Stage C

Stage D
High risk of HF, no structural
heart abnormality
Structural heart disorder, no
symptoms
Structural disorder, past or
current HF symptoms
End-stage disease, requiring
specialized treatment
Diagnosis/Cause Identification

Practitioner and
staff clarify
known causes of a
resident’s heart
failure, or seek
causes if not
identified.
Is a work-up appropriate?



with terminal/end
stage conditions
if it would not
change
management
in a resident that
refuses treatment


if burden of the
work-up is greater
than the benefit
of the treatment
if causes are
reversible
What’s in a work-up?





History/exam
Lab tests
Chest x-ray
EKG
All look for
reversible causes
of CHF
Treatment/Problem
Management



Heart failure treatment:
Based on established recommendations
(i.e. best practice/http://www.acc.org)
Consistent with resident choices, values
overall condition, and prognosis.
Establish goals

Prolong life

Prevent worsening


Improve quality of
life
Provide comfort
care
Treatment/Problem
Management
Did the staff and practitioner
treat contributing factors and
underlying causes of heart failure?
Like what??





Arrhythmia
Pulmonary embolism
Accelerated/maligna
nt hypertension
Thyroid disease
Valvular heart
disease






Unstable angina
Fluid volume status
Renal failure
Medication-induced
High salt-intake
Severe anemia
Treatment
Base therapy on the
presence/absence of fluid volume
overload, nature of dysfunction
 Include annual flu and pneumococcal
vaccination
 Resident’s goals, choices, values,
are always considered

Consider other relevant
interventions





Dietary counseling
Diet modification
Exercise
Smoking cessation
Address end-stage
HF
Monitoring
Implement approaches to
manage the individual with
heart failure
Monitoring

Collaboration
between the
facility, medical
director, and
practitioner
Evaluation and Documentation
Document assessment of heart
function - any complications?
 Evaluate and document reasons why
a resident failed to achieve
cardiac/functional goals
 Review medication regime and
modify as needed

Monitoring

Complications in an
effort to “treat”
heart failure can
occur.
Bibliography

AMDA Clinical Practice Guideline – Heart Failure, 2002

Aquilani, R, et. al. Is nutritional intake adequate in chronic
heart failure patients? Journal of the American College of
Cardiology. 2002 (Vol. 2) (7)

Carboral, M.F. Putting the 2005 American College of
Cardiology/American heart failure association heart failure
guideline into clinical practice: advice for advance practice
nurses. Retrieved June 30, 2006 from http:// www.
Medscape .com/view article/533626
Bibliography

Ferris, Mara. Geriatric Emergency Assessment &
Prevention. 2002; PESI, Eau Clare, WI.

Steefel, Lorraine, RN, MSN. New Advances Offer
Hope for Treating Heart Failure. Nursing
Spectrum, March 2004; pp12-13.