A Description of Patient and Provider Experience and Clinical Outcomes After Heart Failure Shared Medical Appointment

Background: Shared medical appointments (SMAs) are clinical visits in which several patients meet with 1 or more providers at the same time. Objective: To describe the outcomes of an interdisciplinary SMA for veterans recently discharged for heart failure (HF). Methods: A retrospective chart review...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lisa B Cohen PharmD, Melanie Parent BA, Tracey H Taveira PharmD, Sandesh Dev MD, Wen-Chih Wu MD, MPH
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-12-01
Series:Journal of Patient Experience
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373517714452
Description
Summary:Background: Shared medical appointments (SMAs) are clinical visits in which several patients meet with 1 or more providers at the same time. Objective: To describe the outcomes of an interdisciplinary SMA for veterans recently discharged for heart failure (HF). Methods: A retrospective chart review for patients’ readmission rates, survival, medication adherence, and medication-related problems. For qualitative outcomes, we performed semistructured interviews on 12 patients who had undergone HF SMAs and their respective caregivers focusing on care satisfaction, HF knowledge, disease self-care, medication reconciliation, and peer support. Results: The cohort comprised 70 patients—49% had left ventricular function <40% and 50% were prescribed >10 medications. Medication-related problems occurred in 60% of patients. Interviews revealed overall satisfaction with HF-SMA, but patients felt overwhelmed with HF instructions, perceived lack of peer support and self-efficacy, and feelings of hopelessness related to HF. Conclusion: Shared medical appointments are well-perceived. Medication problems and need for medication management are prevalent along with patient’s lack of self-efficacy in HF care. Multiple HF-SMA visits may be needed to reinforce concepts, reduce confusion, and garner peer support.
ISSN:2374-3743
2374-3735