Browsing by keyword "US Preventive Services Task Force"
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Outcomes and early revascularization for patients > or = 65 years of age with cardiogenic shockHospital survival of patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) complicated by cardiogenic shock has improved during recent years. It is unclear whether this mortality benefit also applies to elderly patients with cardiogenic shock. Elderly residents (age > or = 65 years) of the Worcester, Massachusetts metropolitan area (1990 census population = 437,000) hospitalized with confirmed AMI and cardiogenic shock in all metropolitan Worcester, Massachusetts hospitals between 1986 and 1997 constituted the sample of interest. We examined the use of coronary reperfusion strategies, adjunctive therapy, and hospital mortality in a cohort of 166 cardiogenic patients treated early in the reperfusion era (1986 to 1991) compared with 144 patients with AMI treated approximately 1 decade later (1993 to 1997). There was a significant increase in the use of an early revascularization strategy over time (2% vs 16%, p <0.001). Marked increases in use of antiplatelet therapy, beta blockers, and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors were also observed over the decade-long experience. In-hospital case fatality declined significantly over time, from 80% (1986 to 1991) to 69% (1993 to 1997) in elderly patients who developed cardiogenic shock (p = 0.03). After adjusting for differences in potentially confounding prognostic characteristics between patients hospitalized in the 2 study periods, an even more pronounced reduction in hospital mortality (42%) was observed for the most recently hospitalized cohort. The most powerful predictor of in-hospital survival was use of an early revascularization approach to treatment. Thus, hospital mortality has declined for patients > or = 65 years of age with AMI complicated by cardiogenic shock, and this decline has occurred in the setting of broader use of early revascularization and adjunctive medical therapy for this high-risk population.
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The everyday impacts of providing informal care to dependent elders and their consequences for the care recipientsLongitudinal data were used to identify the relationship between different areas of negative impact and elder and caregiver characteristics. The extent and predictors of persistence and development of negative impact in different areas and the relationship between caregiving impact and subsequent caregiving patterns, including termination of care and institutionalization of the elder, were also examined. Caregiving exerted the greatest toll on a caregiver's personal life reported by 61%, in comparison to family life (18%), or employment (15%-20%). Those at particular risk of negative impact included offspring and other-relative caregivers who resided with the elder. All areas of negative impact persisted over time but did not result in any major disruption in care for the elder. However, those elders whose caregivers experienced personal impact were twice as likely to be institutionalized.