Context: The health and policy implications of the marked regional variations in intensity of invasive compared with medical management of patients with acute myocardial infarction(AMI) are unknown. Objectives: To eva...
详细信息
Context: The health and policy implications of the marked regional variations in intensity of invasive compared with medical management of patients with acute myocardial infarction(AMI) are unknown. Objectives: To evaluate patient clinical characteristics associated with receiving more intensive treatment; and to assess whether AMI patients residing in regions with more intensive invasive treatment and management strategies have better longterm survival than those residing in regions with more intensive medical management strategies. Design, Setting, and Patients: National cohort study of 158831 elderly Medicare patients hospitalized with first episode of confirmed AMI in 1994-1995, followed up for 7 years(mean, 3.6 years), according to the intensity of invasive management(perfor-mance of cardiac catheterization within 30 days) and medical management(prescription of βblockers to appropriate patients at discharge) in their region of residence. Baseline chart reviews were drawn from the Cooperative Cardiovascular Project and linked to Medicare health administrative data. Main Outcome Measure: Long-term survival over 7 years of followup. Results: Patient baseline AMI severity was similar across regions. In all regions, younger and healthier patients were more likely than older high-risk patients to receive invasive treatment and medical therapy. Regions with more invasive treatment practice styles had more cardiac catheterization laboratory capacity; patients in these regions were more likely to receive interventional treatment, regardless of age, clinical indication, or risk profile. The absolute unadjusted difference in 7-year survival between regions providing the highest rates of both invasive and medical management strategies and those providing the lowest rates of both was 6.2%. For both ST-and non-ST-segment elevation AMI patients, survival improved with regional intensity of both invasive and medical management. In areas with higher rates of medical management,
暂无评论