The Canadian journal of cardiology
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The structure of the Canadian health care system lends itself to health services and health outcomes research. It is possible to track hospital admissions and discharges, physician billings and prescriptions using administrative databases. In addition, several provinces have developed registries that provide detailed clinical and procedural information. Using the unique personal health numbers assigned to all Canadian residents, linkage between administrative databases and population-based clinical registries provides important information regarding the use of health services and health outcomes. ⋯ While residents of eastern British Columbia appear to have reduced access to cardiac services when data from British Columbia are analyzed in isolation, they are actually accessing care in Alberta. Analyses based solely on single province data sources will underestimate cardiac procedures rates.
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While various community and hospital characteristics have been demonstrated to have an impact on individual cardiovascular outcomes, the extent to which such factors account for inter-regional and interhospital outcome variations following acute myocardial infarction (AMI) remains unknown. ⋯ While community and hospital factors are important determinants of individual outcomes after AMI, they account for only a minimal degree of outcome variation across regions. Further studies are required to examine whether AMI outcome variations in Canada are explained by differences in patient clinical profiles and/or by differences in the decision-making behaviours of providers across jurisdictions.
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Oral anticoagulation is an effective therapy for the prevention of cardioembolic complications in patients with atrial fibrillation. However, previous practice reviews have indicated that oral anticoagulants are often underused in this setting. Most of those reports have focused on reviews of hospitalized and institutionalized patients, or small geographical areas. ⋯ The appropriate use of oral antithrombotic therapy for the prevention of thrombotic complications of atrial fibrillation occurs in approximately 72% of patients studied in Nova Scotia, and physician knowledge about this indication is high. There was no bias against prescribing oral anticoagulants to elderly patients. The findings suggest that with time, education and evidence have positively impacted the use of antithrombotic therapy in these patients.