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1.
Am J Med Sci ; 344(3): 211-9, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22475731

ABSTRACT

Non-attendance reduces clinic and provider productivity and efficiency, compromises access and increases cost of health care. This systematic review of the English language literature (November 1999-November 2009) compares telephone, mail, text/short message service, electronic mail and open-access scheduling to determine which is best at reducing outpatient non-attendance and providing net financial benefit. Telephone, mail and text/short message service interventions all improved attendance modestly but at varying costs. Text messaging was the most cost-effective of the 3, but its applicability may be limited. Few data are available regarding electronic mail reminders, whereas open-access scheduling is an area of active research.


Subject(s)
Appointments and Schedules , Patient Compliance , Reminder Systems , Humans , Program Evaluation , Reminder Systems/economics
2.
Am J Med ; 122(4): 329-32, 2009 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19332224

ABSTRACT

Evidence-based management of chronic systolic heart failure includes risk factor management, therapeutic lifestyle changes, and a polypharmaceutical regimen that prolongs survival, reduces or reverses progression of myocardial dysfunction, alleviates symptoms, and limits complications. Subspecialty consultation is warranted when symptoms progress despite standard therapy; interventions are needed for refractory coronary disease, an arrhythmia device is indicated, or surgical intervention or transplantation is considered.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Agents/therapeutic use , Heart Failure, Systolic/therapy , Ambulatory Care/methods , Cardiology/methods , Cardiovascular Agents/adverse effects , Chronic Disease , Evidence-Based Practice , Heart Failure, Systolic/drug therapy , Humans , Referral and Consultation , Risk Reduction Behavior
3.
Am J Med ; 120(1): 12-5, 2007 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17208071

ABSTRACT

More patients are both suffering and surviving acute coronary syndromes. After hospital discharge, a host of interventions, including medications, therapeutic lifestyle changes, revascularization, and electrophysiologic devices improve quality of life and survival. Evidence-based management requires the general internist to have a working knowledge of these interventions and to identify patients whose outcomes would benefit from subspecialty referral.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care/methods , Coronary Disease/rehabilitation , Survivors , Acute Disease , Coronary Disease/complications , Humans , Life Style , Outpatients , Quality of Life , Referral and Consultation , Risk Factors
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