Division of Applied Technology for Clinical Care, Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery & Palliative Care, King's College London, James Clerk Maxwell Building, 57 Waterloo Road, London SE1 8WA, UK.
Age-Related Health Care, Tallaght University Hospital Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Europace. 2022 Dec 9;24(12):2004-2014. doi: 10.1093/europace/euac136.
As part of the EHRS-PATHS study examining comorbidities in atrial fibrillation (AF) across Europe, the aim was (i) to evaluate how multimorbidity is currently addressed by clinicians during AF treatment to characterize the treatment structure and (ii) to assess how the interdisciplinary management of multimorbid AF is currently conducted. An online survey was distributed among European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA) members in Europe that included 21 questions and a free-text option for comments on detection, assessment, and management of AF-related comorbidities. A total of 451 responses were received with 339 responses eligible for inclusion. Of these, 221 were male (66%), 300 (91.5%) were physicians, and 196 (57.8%) were working in academic university teaching hospitals. Half of the respondents managed between 20 and 50 patients per month with multimorbid AF. Varying rates of specialist services and referral to these services were available at each location (e.g. heart failure and diabetes), with a greater number of specialist services available at academic university teaching hospitals compared with non-teaching hospitals [e.g. anticoagulation clinic 92 (47%) vs. 50 (35%), P < 0.03]. Barriers to referring to specialist services for AF comorbidities included lack of integrated care model (n = 174, 51%), organizational or institutional issues (n = 145, 43%), and issues with patient adherence (n = 126, 37%), highlighting the need for organizational restructuring and developing an integrated collaborative evidenced-based approach to multimorbid AF care. The survey and analyses of free-text comments demonstrated the need for systematic, integrated management of AF-related comorbidities, and these results will inform the next phases of the EHRA-PATHS study.
作为一项在整个欧洲范围内研究心房颤动(AF)合并症的 EHRS-PATHS 研究的一部分,其目的是:(i)评估在治疗 AF 期间,临床医生目前如何处理多种合并症,以描述治疗结构;(ii)评估多合并症 AF 的跨学科管理目前是如何进行的。一项包含 21 个问题的在线调查在欧洲的欧洲心律协会(EHRA)成员中进行,其中还包括一个关于检测、评估和管理与 AF 相关合并症的自由文本选项。共收到 451 份回复,其中 339 份符合纳入标准。其中,221 名男性(66%),300 名(91.5%)为医生,196 名(57.8%)在学术大学教学医院工作。一半的受访者每月管理 20 到 50 名患有多合并症 AF 的患者。在每个地点都有不同的专科服务和转介这些服务的比例(例如心力衰竭和糖尿病),与非教学医院相比,学术大学教学医院拥有更多的专科服务[例如抗凝治疗门诊 92 名(47%)比 50 名(35%),P < 0.03]。将 AF 合并症转介给专科服务的障碍包括缺乏综合护理模式(n = 174,51%)、组织或机构问题(n = 145,43%)以及患者依从性问题(n = 126,37%),这突显了对组织结构进行重组和制定多合并症 AF 护理的综合协作循证方法的必要性。调查和对自由文本评论的分析表明需要对 AF 相关合并症进行系统、综合的管理,这些结果将为 EHRA-PATHS 研究的下一阶段提供信息。