Author: Oseran, Andrew S.; Afari, Maxwell E.; Barrett, Conor D.; Lewis, Gregory D.; Thomas, Sunu S.
Title: Beyond the stethoscope: managing ambulatory heart failure during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic Cord-id: joj39a1b Document date: 2021_1_27
ID: joj39a1b
Snippet: There have been nearly 70 million cases of COVIDâ€19 worldwide, with over 1.5 million deaths at the time of this publication. This global pandemic has mandated dramatic changes in healthcare delivery with a particular focus on social distancing in order to reduce viral transmission. Heart failure patients are among the highest utilizers of health care and are at increased risk for COVIDâ€related vulnerabilities. Effectively managing this complex and resourceâ€intensive patient population from
Document: There have been nearly 70 million cases of COVIDâ€19 worldwide, with over 1.5 million deaths at the time of this publication. This global pandemic has mandated dramatic changes in healthcare delivery with a particular focus on social distancing in order to reduce viral transmission. Heart failure patients are among the highest utilizers of health care and are at increased risk for COVIDâ€related vulnerabilities. Effectively managing this complex and resourceâ€intensive patient population from a distance presents new and unique challenges. Here, we review relevant data on telemedicine and remote monitoring strategies for heart failure patients and provide a framework to help providers treat this population during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. This includes (i) dedicated preâ€visit contact and planning (i.e. confirm clinical appropriateness, presence of compatible technology, and patient comfort); (ii) utilization of virtual clinic visits (use of telehealth platforms, a videoâ€assisted exam, selfâ€reported vital signs, and weights); and (iii) use of existing remote heart failure monitoring sensors when applicable (CardioMEMS, Optivol, and HeartLogic). While telemedicine and remote monitoring strategies are not new, these technologies are emerging as an important tool for the effective management of heart failure patients during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. In general, these strategies appear to be safe; however, additional data will be needed to determine their effectiveness with respect to both process and outcomes measures.
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