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Critical care nurse · Apr 2019
The Three Rs for Preventing Heart Failure Readmission: Review, Reassess, and Reeducate.
- Catherine J Ryan, Rebecca Schuetz Bierle, and Karen M Vuckovic.
- Catherine J. Ryan is a clinical associate professor, Department of Biobehavioral Health Sciences, College of Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, and Director, Nursing Evidence Based Practice and Nursing Research, University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System, Chicago. cryan4@uic.edu.
- Crit Care Nurse. 2019 Apr 1; 39 (2): 85-93.
AbstractDespite improvements in heart failure therapies, hospitalization readmission rates remain high. Nationally, increasing attention has been directed toward reducing readmission rates and thus identifying patients with the highest risk for readmission. This article summarizes the evidence related to decreasing readmission for patients with heart failure within 30 days after discharge, focusing on the acute setting. Each patient requires an individualized plan for successful transition from hospital to home and preventing readmission. Nurses must review the patient's current plan of care and adherence to it and look for clues to failure of the plan that could lead to readmission to the hospital. In addition, nurses must reassess the current plan with the patient and family to ensure that the plan continues to meet the patient's needs. Finally, nurses must continually reeducate patients about their plan of care, their plan for self-management, and strategies to prevent hospital readmission for heart failure.©2019 American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
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