Quality of Care and 30-day Mortality of Women and Men With Acute Myocardial Infarction

AbstractIntroduction and objectivesDespite increased awareness of sex disparities in care and outcomes of acute myocardial infarction (AMI), there appears to have been no consistent attenuation of these differences over the last decade. We investigated differences by sex in management and 30-day mor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Revista española de cardiología (English ed.) 2019-07, Vol.72 (7), p.543-552
Hauptverfasser: Araújo, Carla, Laszczyńska, Olga, Viana, Marta, Dias, Paula, Maciel, Maria Júlia, Moreira, Ilídio, Azevedo, Ana
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:AbstractIntroduction and objectivesDespite increased awareness of sex disparities in care and outcomes of acute myocardial infarction (AMI), there appears to have been no consistent attenuation of these differences over the last decade. We investigated differences by sex in management and 30-day mortality using the European Society of Cardiology Acute Cardiovascular Care Association quality indicators (QIs) for AMI.MethodsProportions and standard errors of the 20 Acute Cardiovascular Care Association QIs were calculated for 771 patients with AMI who were admitted to the cardiology departments of 2 tertiary hospitals in Portugal between August 2013 and December 2014. The association between the composite QI and 30-day mortality was derived from logistic regression.ResultsSignificantly fewer eligible women than men received timely reperfusion, were discharged on dual antiplatelet therapy and high-intensity statins, and were referred to cardiac rehabilitation. Women were less likely to receive recommended interventions (59.6% vs 65.2%; P < .001) and also had higher mean GRACE 2.0 risk score-adjusted 30-day mortality (3.0% vs 1.7%; P < .001). An inverse association between the composite QI and crude 30-day mortality was observed for both sexes (OR, 0.08; 95%CI, 0.01-0.64 for the highest performance tertile vs the lowest). ConclusionsPerformance in AMI management is worse for women than men and is associated with higher 30-day mortality, which is also worse for women. Evidence-based QIs have the potential to improve health care delivery and patient prognosis in the overall AMI population and may also bridge the disparity gap between women and men.
ISSN:1885-5857
1885-5857
DOI:10.1016/j.rec.2018.05.012