Posts Tagged ‘Heart attack’

Singing the Birthday Blues

Wednesday, June 27th, 2012

People aged 60 and over are 14 percent more likely to die on their birthdays A recent study of more than two million people found that the birthday blues bring a rise in deaths from heart attacks, strokes, falls, suicides and even cancer.  The findings – based on a study over 40 years in Switzerland – back up the idea that birthday stress has a major impact on lifespans.  The majority of the increase was attributed to heart attacks, which rose 18.6 percent on birthdays and were significantly higher for men and women.  Levels of strokes were up 21.5 per cent – primarily in women – and there was a surprisingly large increase in cancer deaths in both sexes of 10.5 per cent.

Dr Vladeta Ajdacic-Gross, a senior researcher in psychiatry at the University of Zurich, said: Birthdays end lethally more frequently than might be expected.”  One notable person who died on his birthday is William Shakespeare, who passed away in 1616 of causes unknown.

The Swiss research is confirmed by data on Canadian hospital admissions showing that strokes are more likely to occur on birthdays than other days, especially among patients with a history of high blood pressure.  A substantial rise in suicides and accidental deaths for the over-60s on birthdays was found only in men.  There was a 34.9 percent rise in suicides; 28.5 percent rise in accidental deaths not related to cars; and a 44 percent rise in deaths from falls on birthdays.  The risk increases for about four days before the big day.

It was previously thought that people are more likely to die after their birthday as the thought of reaching a milestone would help them hold on for more time.  The researchers said this theory was disproved by their findings, and they support the anniversary reaction theory – also known as the birthday blues.

Dr Lewis Halsey, a senior lecturer in environmental physiology at the University of Roehampton, said: “One interesting finding is that more suicides happen on birthdays, though only in men.  The authors suggest that this increase could be related to them drinking more alcohol on birthdays.  But perhaps men are more likely to make a statement about their unhappiness when they think people will be taking more notice of them.  Or perhaps women feel that it is unfair on others who might be celebrating with them to put them through dealing with suicide.”

American researchers have found similar increases in heart deaths on Christmas and New Year’s Day.  They list stress among possible causes — and say people having chest pain or other symptoms might wait too long to get medical help on days when they are thinking about celebrating.

Living Solo Can Be Hazardous to Your Health

Monday, June 25th, 2012

Living to a ripe old age may depend on a person’s relationship to family, friends and community, according to research that finds lonely older adults are more likely to die sooner than their more socially active peers.  Lonely people who are 60 and older tend to have a 45 percent higher risk of dying over the next six years, according to research in the Archives of Internal Medicine.  Another study showed that people who live alone and had heart disease were 25 percent more likely to die from the illness.

Approximately one in seven Americans live by themselves.  The first study to examine the link between social isolation and death points to the importance of addressing psychosocial needs along with medical ones in improving the health of older adults, according to Carla Perissinotto, a study author.  “We cannot continue to ignore the other things that are happening in people’s lives,” said Perissinotto, an assistant professor of medicine and geriatrics at the University of California San Francisco.  “If we turn a blind eye to what our patients are experiencing at home, we may be missing a place to make a difference in someone’s health.”

The lonely people studied were more likely to have limited mobility and greater difficulty performing basic tasks like grooming and cleaning.  Approximately 25 percent of lonely people were likely to develop trouble compared to 13 percent who weren’t lonely.  While the connection between well-being and friendships isn’t new, the latest findings look specifically at people who self-identified as lonely, regardless of how extensive their social network.  “It’s about connectivity,” Carla M. Perissinotto said.  “Someone can have multiple social contacts but still somehow feel that they’re not connecting.”

One study followed nearly 45,000 people aged 45 and older who suffered from heart disease or had a high risk of developing it.  Those who lived alone were more likely to die from heart attacks, strokes, or other heart complications over a four-year period than people living with family or friends, or in some other communal arrangement.  The risk was highest in middle-aged people, just 14 percent of whom lived alone. Solo living increased the risk of heart problems and early death by 24 percent among people ages 45 to 65, and by only 12 percent among people ages 66 to 80.  And there was no association at all in people age 80 and older, a group in which living alone is widespread.

Additional research is needed to confirm the findings, but it may not be a bad idea for physicians to ask heart patients about their living situation, said senior author Dr. Deepak L. Bhatt, M.D., a cardiologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, in Boston.  Living solo “could be a little red flag that a patient may be at a higher risk of bad outcomes,” Bhatt said.  But living alone could impact health in more immediate ways.  For example, people who live along may skip their medications or ignore the warning signs of heart trouble, according to Bhatt.

Bhatt notes that patients who live alone should never ignore changes that might be a sign of health problems.  “Many times people just adapt to their circumstances.  Perhaps just lower your threshold a little bit and realize it’s better to call (the doctor) than not to call.”  That might not be the entire story.  “Other mechanisms by which living alone could increase cardiac risk have to do with possible social isolation and loneliness, and these are more challenging to fix,” he said.

According to Emily M. Bucholz, M.P.H., a medical student and doctoral candidate at Yale University, “Living alone, in and of itself, could stand for many different things.  Does it mean you lack companionship?  Or is it that there is no one there to help you out with medications?  Does it have to do with mobility or nutrition?”

Writing in Time, Alice Park notes that “Loneliness can be detrimental in many ways, some of which are biological and some of which are more behavioral.  Feeling isolated can trigger changes in brain chemicals and hormones that can increase inflammation in the body, for example, which can exacerbate conditions like heart disease and arthritis.  Loneliness may also lead to other problems — poor sleep, depression, a disinterest in one’s own healthcare — which can in turn contribute to disability and early death.  Which is why the researchers were particularly concerned over another finding — many of the elderly who said they felt lonely were not actually living alone.

Rather, they were married or living with family members.  That suggests that the size of a person’s social network isn’t the only measure of loneliness, and that studies that look only at the number of people’s contacts may miss an entirely separate factor that can have a significant impact on health, said Perissinotto.  ‘I think that from a public health and policy level, we are doing a disservice by not asking (people) about their subjective feelings of loneliness.  We focus on their diabetes control and treating their hypertension, but are we missing something that may be more distressing to patients and have more of an impact on their health?’”

Loneliness is a common source of suffering in older persons,” according to the study’s authors.  “We demonstrated that it is also a risk factor for poor health outcomes including death and multiple measures of functional decline.  Assessment of loneliness is not routine in clinical practice and it may be viewed as beyond the scope of medical practice.  However, loneliness may be an important predictor of adverse health outcomes as many traditional medical risk factors.  Our results suggest that questioning older persons about loneliness may be a useful way of identifying elderly persons at risk of disability and poor health outcomes.”

Hospitals, CMS Butt Heads Over Too Many Readmissions

Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

Medicare has plans to penalize hospitals that frequently readmit patients who really don’t need hospitalization. According to one estimate, this practice costs the federal government $12 billion every year.  Medicare’s goal is to persuade hospitals to be certain that patients get the care they need following their discharge.  This new policy is likely to excessively impact hospitals, particularly those that treat low-income patients, according to a Kaiser Health News analysis of data provided by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.  Hospitals that admitted the most underprivileged Medicare patients were approximately 60 percent as likely to have significantly higher readmission rates for heart failure.  At these hospitals, lower-income people comprise a larger share of the patients than they do at 80 percent of hospitals.

“When some of our patients get home, their lights and gas are shut off,” said Roland Abellera, vice president of quality and corporate compliance at St. Bernard Hospital in Chicago’s blighted Englewood neighborhood.  “So what ends up happening is that the ambulance brings them back to us and we have to house them until our staff can help them get the utilities turned on.  We have a community in need.”

Within 30 days of discharge, 25 percent of Medicare patients with heart failure are readmitted to the hospital.  The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) has ruled that beginning next October, Medicare will fine hospitals whose patients who have had heart attacks, heart failure or pneumonia return to the hospital too soon.  By 2014, hospitals with high readmission rates can potentially lose up to three percent of their Medicare reimbursements.

Medicare has set aside funds so hospitals can more effectively plan patients’ post-discharge care.  According to Patrick Conway, Medicare’s chief medical officer, some funds will be targeted to hospitals that serve significant numbers of poorer people.  “We especially are concerned about safety-net hospitals that take care of a high portion of patients in poverty and racial and ethnic minorities,” he said.  At the same time, his agency is committed to the readmission penalties, in part because it is the law and because it believes the penalties will persuade hospitals to be certain that patients get the follow-up care they need.

Some hospital administrators are concerned that the new policy is too harsh.  “In essence, they are penalizing those hospitals and areas that need the most help and the most money to address these issues because we have the sickest, most noncompliant and vulnerable patient population,” said Guy Alton, chief financial officer at St. Bernard.  According to Abellera, St. Bernard’s heart failure patients usually have more than one serious conditions, such as kidney failure, hypertension and diabetes.  “A patient does not come here for heart failure alone,” he said.  “They have no less than six or seven diagnoses — we’ve had many with more than that.”

Dr. Ashish Jha, in the latest New England Journal of Medicine, makes the case that readmissions aren’t the best gauge of unnecessary care — even though they’re a natural target for budget-cutters.  The Harvard University professor points out that many hospitals with the highest readmission rates serve the poorest areas with the biggest health problems.  “Readmissions are caused by what hospitals do, who the patients are, and what’s happening in the community,” he says. “You want hospitals to fix the things they can, but you don’t want to punish them for taking care of poor people, and you don’t want to punish them for being located in a poor area.”

Two of the most frequent reasons for hospital readmissions are medication errors and failure to see a physician – both of which could be reduced if patients were supervised through home care visits following discharge.