Heart Failure Clinical Process Guideline - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Heart Failure Clinical Process Guideline

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Heart Failure Clinical Process Guideline Deborah Ayers, RN, MSN Quality Improvement Nurse Consultant General Information Optional Best Practice Tool Effective ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Heart Failure Clinical Process Guideline


1
Heart Failure Clinical Process Guideline
  • Deborah Ayers, RN, MSN
  • Quality Improvement Nurse Consultant

2
General Information
  • Optional Best Practice Tool
  • Effective date for usage
  • Electronic copies of the tool are available on
    the website
  • http//michigan.gov/bhs click Best Practice
    Information Guidelines

3
Clinical Advisory Panel
  • Deborah Ayers RN, MSN - State QI Nurse
  • Chris Glue- Restorative CNA - Dimondale, Lansing
  • Teresa Gurny, RN/DON - Medilodge of Howell
  • Dr. Steve Levenson- Geriatrician - Baltimore,
    Maryland

4
Clinical Advisory Panel (cont.)
  • Sue Mangan - Pharmacist/Surveyor -Metro West Team
  • Julie Savage, RN, MSN Eden CMCF
  • Nancy Wong, RN, BSN - ADON/In-service
    Director/Woodward Hills NC
  • Barbara Zabitz RD/Surveyor - Metro West Team

5
Guideline Format
  • Basic Care Process Steps
  • Expectations of facilities related to steps
  • Rationale for expectations
  • Documentation Check list
  • Relevant Tables

6
Heart Failure
  • A constellation of signs/symptoms that result
    from the inability of the heart to pump blood to
    the body at a rate the body needs.

7
Care Process Steps
  • It always begins with an Assessment

8
Assessment
  • Residents with history/or risk factors for heart
    failure
  • Transfer data
  • Labs, EKG, echo, chest film
  • Anemia, COPD, other lung diseases
  • Previous treatment
  • Hospitalization for heart failure.

9
Assess Risk Factors
  • Arrhythmia
  • Anemia
  • Fluid volume overload with noncardiac causes
  • Thyroid disease
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Angina/infarction
  • Chronic hypertension
  • Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy
  • Valvular heart disease

10
New admissions with CHF
  • Look for signs and symptoms
  • Diagnostic test results
  • Document the findings

11
Staff and practitioner . . . identify
  • The severity and consequences of heart failure

12
Myocardial Dysfunction
  • Systolic Dysfunction
  • Left ventricle has reduced muscle contractility
  • Diastolic
  • Decreased left ventricular filling
  • Caused by ventricular stiffness, decreased rate
    of relaxation, or rapid heart rate

13
Functional Assessment
  • Class I
  • No limitations of physical activity. No shortness
    of breath, fatigue, or heart palpitations with
    ordinary physical activity.
  • Class II
  • Slight limitation of physical activity. SOB,
    fatigue, heart palpitations. Patient comfortable
    at rest.
  • Class III
  • Symptoms with minimal exertion. SOB, fatigue,
    heart palpitations. Patients comfortable at rest.
  • Class IV
  • Severe to complete limitation of activity. SOB,
    fatigue, heart palpitations, even at rest.

14
American College of CardiologyAmerican Heart
Association
  • Stage A High risk of HF, no structural heart
    abnormality
  • Stage B Structural heart disorder, no
    symptoms
  • Stage C Structural disorder, past or current
    HF symptoms
  • Stage D End-stage disease, requiring
    specialized treatment

15
Diagnosis/Cause Identification
  • Practitioner and staff clarify known causes of a
    residents heart failure, or seek causes if not
    identified.

16
Is a work-up appropriate?
  • with terminal/end stage conditions
  • if it would not change management
  • in a resident that refuses treatment
  • if burden of the work-up is greater than the
    benefit of the treatment
  • if causes are reversible

17
Whats in a work-up?
  • History/exam
  • Lab tests
  • Chest x-ray
  • EKG
  • All look for reversible causes of CHF

18
Treatment/Problem Management
  • Heart failure treatment
  • Based on established recommendations (i.e. best
    practice/http//www.acc.org)
  • Consistent with resident choices, values overall
    condition, and prognosis.

19
Establish goals
  • Prolong life
  • Prevent worsening
  • Improve quality of life
  • Provide comfort care

20
Treatment/Problem Management
  • Did the staff and practitioner treat contributing
    factors and underlying causes of heart failure?

21
Like what??
  • Arrhythmia
  • Pulmonary embolism
  • Accelerated/malignant hypertension
  • Thyroid disease
  • Valvular heart disease
  • Unstable angina
  • Fluid volume status
  • Renal failure
  • Medication-induced
  • High salt-intake
  • Severe anemia

22
Treatment
  • Base therapy on the presence/absence of fluid
    volume overload, nature of dysfunction
  • Include annual flu and pneumococcal vaccination
  • Residents goals, choices, values, are always
    considered

23
Consider other relevant interventions
  • Dietary counseling
  • Diet modification
  • Exercise
  • Smoking cessation
  • Address end-stage HF

24
Monitoring
  • Implement approaches to manage the individual
    with heart failure

25
Monitoring
  • Collaboration between the facility, medical
    director, and practitioner

26
Evaluation and Documentation
  • Document assessment of heart function - any
    complications?
  • Evaluate and document reasons why a resident
    failed to achieve cardiac/functional goals
  • Review medication regime and modify as needed

27
Monitoring
  • Complications in an effort to treat heart
    failure can occur.

28
Bibliography
  • AMDA Clinical Practice Guideline Heart Failure,
    2002
  • Aquilani, R, et. al. Is nutritional intake
    adequate in chronic heart failure patients?
    Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
    2002 (Vol. 2) (7)
  • Carboral, M.F. Putting the 2005 American College
    of Cardiology/American heart failure association
    heart failure guideline into clinical practice
    advice for advance practice nurses. Retrieved
    June 30, 2006 from http// www. Medscape
    .com/view article/533626

29
Bibliography
  • Ferris, Mara. Geriatric Emergency Assessment
    Prevention. 2002 PESI, Eau Clare, WI.
  • Steefel, Lorraine, RN, MSN. New Advances Offer
    Hope for Treating Heart Failure. Nursing
    Spectrum, March 2004 pp12-13.
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