scholarly journals Cardiac Rehabilitation in the Region of Veneto

2005 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Carlon

In Italy there has been a progressive shifting of the legislative and fiscal activity from a national level to a regional one. In the Venetian district a series of documents, also concerning the cardiac rehabilitation, has been produced. A document elaborated in 1999 contains a detailed account of eligibility criteria for cardiac rehabilitation as well as of structural and organizational requirements. Other documents contain the updated price lists for admission episode (DRG 462) or days of stay in hospital and diurnal hospital activity, according to the type of structure which supplies the service. For outpatients, cardiac rehabilitation is identified by the code 93.36 and the ticket fare is 19,50€. In the enclosure no.6 of the Sanitary Regional Plan, still under definitive approval, it is stated that for each Intensive Therapy there will be a functional connector with a cardiac rehabilitation service which, except for few Centers, will carry on its activity with outpatients. At present the regional Cardiac Rehabilitation includes 3 complex units (for in- and outpatients) and 13 simple units (for outpatients only), with a total of 3031 patients rehabilitated in 2004.

2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
R Gallagher ◽  
C Astley ◽  
E Thomas ◽  
R Zecchin ◽  
C Ferry ◽  
...  

Abstract Background/Introduction Comprehensive exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation (CR) has well-established efficacy and effectiveness for improving patients' outcomes. There is substantial variability in terms of clinical effectiveness and quality measurement of CR programs internationally which limits service improvement initiatives. In Australia in 2018 a the Australian Cardiovascular Health and Rehabilitation Association (ACRA) and the National Heart Foundation of Australia (NHFA) combined forces to develop nationally-agreed, internationally-consistent, locally-relevant quality indicators (QI). Purpose To provide a minimum set of standardised national-level QI that should be collected and reported on by CR programs to determine the quality of delivery and associated outcomes, benchmark performance and support improvement processes. Methods We formed the National Cardiac Rehabilitation Measurement (NCRM) Taskforce led by ACRA and NHF and used the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) UK guidelines to develop high quality QIs. The process included topic overview, prioritising areas for quality improvement, drafting and consultation, validation and consistency checking. Results Eleven preliminary QIs were circulated for ranking and comment to all ACRA members (predominately multidisciplinary CR providers) (68 responses), and to leading national multidisciplinary CR experts from cardiology, research, physiotherapy, nursing, epidemiology and register backgrounds (7 responses). Ratings, comments and suggestions were collated and discussed by the NCRM Taskforce, and the indicators rated most important, useful and feasible were retained, resulting in 10 QIs. These 10 QIs were presented at the ACRA national conference and then discussed at a workshop (55 participants) for this purpose. Ten QIs and accompanying data dictionary with definitions, evidence and allowable values is the final product. Conclusions A minimum set of locally relevant, internationally recognised, national QIs for CR is now available for CR providers, health service managers and researchers in Australia, which may be relevant internationally. The QIs will best serve national interests incorporated within a national cardiac registry but will also be useful for site audits and have strong potential to be aggregated across sites, health districts and states. The definitive test of the QIs will be how useful they are for CR program coordinators and funders of such programs; a key consideration for building sustainable business models and ensuring long-term implementation. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None


BMJ Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. e046051
Author(s):  
Alasdair F O'Doherty ◽  
Helen Humphreys ◽  
Susan Dawkes ◽  
Aynsley Cowie ◽  
Sally Hinton ◽  
...  

ObjectiveTo investigate whether exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation services continued during the COVID-19 pandemic and how technology has been used to deliver home-based cardiac rehabilitation.DesignA mixed methods survey including questions about exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation service provision, programme diversity, patient complexity, technology use, barriers to using technology, and safety.SettingInternational survey of exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation programmes.ParticipantsHealthcare professionals working in exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation programmes worldwide.Main outcome measuresThe proportion of programmes that continued providing exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation and which technologies had been used to deliver home-based cardiac rehabilitation.ResultsThree hundred and thirty eligible responses were received; 89.7% were from the UK. Approximately half (49.3%) of respondents reported that cardiac rehabilitation programmes were suspended due to COVID-19. Of programmes that continued, 25.8% used technology before the COVID-19 pandemic. Programmes typically started using technology within 19 days of COVID-19 becoming a pandemic. 48.8% did not provide cardiac rehabilitation to high-risk patients, telephone was most commonly used to deliver cardiac rehabilitation, and some centres used sophisticated technology such as teleconferencing.ConclusionsThe rapid adoption of technology into standard practice is promising and may improve access to, and participation in, exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation beyond COVID-19. However, the exclusion of certain patient groups and programme suspension could worsen clinical symptoms and well-being, and increase hospital admissions. Refinement of current practices, with a focus on improving inclusivity and addressing safety concerns around exercise support to high-risk patients, may be needed.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2176-2176
Author(s):  
Shannon L Smiley ◽  
Theresa Hahn ◽  
Wei Tan ◽  
Gregory Wilding ◽  
Minoo Battiwalla ◽  
...  

Abstract Cyclophosphamide+total body irradiation +/− etoposide (CyTBI+/−V) is a standard conditioning regimen prior to auto-SCT for NHL patients. However, TBI-based dose intensive therapy is often contraindicated in older patients, or those with prior radiation. We performed a single-institution Phase II non-randomized prospective study of VCyTBI vs. Busulfan+Cy (BuCy) to determine if BuCy provides comparable disease control to standard dose intensive therapy with VCyTBI. BuCy was used in patients ≥60 years and when TBI was contraindicated. Seventy-five relapsed or refractory NHL patients underwent auto-SCT at Roswell Park Cancer Institute from 8/92 to 7/05. All patients were treated on a single IRB-approved protocol with standard eligibility criteria including age ≥18 and ≤70, adequate cardiac, pulmonary, hepatic and renal function and KPS ≥70. All patients signed informed consent and were followed prospectively. All data have been de-identified. Survival status for all patients was updated through 8/1/08. VCyTBI (N=47) consisted of V 1800 mg/m2 26-hour continuous iv infusion on day -5, Cy 60 mg/kg day -4 (12 patients received 180 mg/kg total dose), and TBI 200 cGy on days -3, -2, and -1 for total dose of 1000 cGy (8 patients received 1200 cGy). BuCy (N=28) consisted of iv Bu 0.8 mg/kg every 6 hours on days -7, -6, -5, -4 (total 12.8mg, one patient received oral Bu total dose 16 mg/kg) and Cy 60 mg/kg on days -3 and -2 (total 120 mg/kg, one patient received total dose 200 mg/kg). Eight patients received iv Bu without dose adjustment and 19 received iv Bu with dose adjusted to maintain a steady state level between 600– 900 ng/ml. Stem cells were re-infused on day 0. Patients received peripheral blood stem cells (n=53), bone marrow (n=14) or both (n=8). The median age was significantly higher in the BuCy compared to the VCyTBI group (61.5 vs 53 years, p=0.0002), and there were fewer patients with a KPS of 90–100 in the VCyTBI group (75% vs 93%, p=0.07). There were no significant differences on the following patient characteristics by BuCy vs VCyTBI: gender, disease risk, stem cell source, histology (diffuse, follicular, mantle, other), or remission status at SCT. Treatment-related mortality at day+100 post-auto SCT was very low in both groups: 0% in BuCy and 2% in VCyTBI. However, 3 patients in the VCyTBI group and none in the BuCy group developed AML at 1.3, 1.8 and 6.5 years post-auto-SCT. At a median follow-up of 4.6 years, the 5-year progression-free survival for BuCy and VCyTBI was 32% (95% CI 14–50%) and 24% (95% CI, 11–39%, P>0.8), respectively. The 5-year overall survival for BuCy and VCyTBI was 46% (95% CI 25– 64%) and 49% (95% CI 33–64%, P>0.7), respectively. Multivariate analysis controlling for age and KPS at BMT also demonstrated no significant difference between BuCy and VCyTBI for either progression-free (RR=0.9, 95% CI 0.5–1.8) or overall (RR=0.7, 95% CI 0.3–1.6) survival. This is the largest reported study evaluating the efficacy of BuCy as alternative conditioning for auto-SCT in relapsed/refractory NHL. BuCy provides equivalent survival outcomes to VCyTBI as conditioning for auto-SCT in NHL patients. Based on these results, our practice continues to use BuCy for NHL patients ≥60 years.


Author(s):  
H. M. Naveen

The NEP, 2020 reiterates the holistic and multidisciplinary education. Even engineering institutions, such as IITs, will move towards more holistic and multidisciplinary education with more arts and humanities. The Academic Bank of Credits (ABCs) shall be a national-level facility to promote flexibility of curriculum framework and interdisciplinary academic mobility of students across HEIs with appropriate credit transfer mechanism. It will enable the integration of multiple disciplines of higher learning, leading to the desired outcomes including enhanced creativity, innovation, higher order thinking and critical analysis. Academic Bank of Credits is essentially a credit-based, and highly flexible, student-centric facility. Students are eligible for Credit transfer, Credit accrual and Credit redemption through ABCs. The present article enlighten the readers with regard to Objectives of ABCs ; Functions of ABCs ; Organizational Structures of ABCs ; Implementation Plan for ABCs ; and Eligibility Criteria for HEIs to register with ABCs. The Regulations presented in this article are called as the University Grants Commission (Establishment and Operation of Academic Bank of Credits in Higher Education) Regulations, 2021 which will be implemented from the academic year 2021-22.


Author(s):  
Susan Marzolini ◽  
Karen Fong ◽  
David Jagroop ◽  
Jennifer Neirinckx ◽  
Jean Liu ◽  
...  

Abstract Background People after stroke benefit from comprehensive programs for the prevention of secondary effects, including cardiac rehabilitation (CR), yet there is little understanding of eligibility for exercise and barriers to use. Objective The aim of this study was to examine eligibility for CR; enrollment, adherence, and completion; and factors affecting use. Design This was a prospective study of 116 consecutive people enrolled in a single outpatient stroke rehabilitation (OSR) program located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Methods Questionnaires were completed by treating physical therapists for consecutive participants receiving OSR and included reasons for CR ineligibility, reasons for declining participation, demographics, and functional level. CR eligibility criteria included the ability to walk ≥100 m (no time restriction) and the ability to exercise at home independently or with assistance. People with or without hemiplegic gait were eligible for adapted or traditional CR, respectively. Logistic regression analyses were used to examine factors associated with use indicators. Results Of 116 participants receiving OSR, 82 (70.7%) were eligible for CR; 2 became eligible later. Sixty (71.4%) enrolled in CR, and 49 (81.7%) completed CR, attending 87.1% (SD = 16.6%) of prescribed sessions. The primary reasons for ineligibility included being nonambulatory or having poor ambulation (52.9%; 18/34 patients) and having severe cognitive deficits and no home exercise support (20.6%; 7/34). Frequently cited reasons for declining CR were moving or travel out of country (17.2%; 5/29 reasons), lack of interest (13.8%; 4/29), transportation issues (10.3%; 3/29), and desiring a break from therapy (10.3%; 3/29). In a multivariate analysis, people who declined CR were more likely to be women, less compliant with OSR, and not diabetic. Compared with traditional CR, stroke-adapted CR resulted in superior attendance (66.1% [SD = 22.9%] versus 87.1% [SD = 16.6%], respectively) and completion (66.7% versus 89.7%, respectively). The primary reasons for dropping out were medical (45%) and moving (27%). Limitations Generalizability to other programs is limited, and other, unmeasured factors may have affected outcomes. Conclusions An OSR-CR partnership provided an effective continuum of care, with approximately 75% of eligible people participating and more than 80% completing. However, just over 1 of 4 eligible people declined participation; therefore, strategies should target lack of interest, transportation, women, and people without diabetes. An alternative program model is needed for people who have severe ambulatory or cognitive deficits and no home exercise support.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  
R Waitzberg ◽  
A E Schmidt ◽  
M Blümel ◽  
F Barbabella

Abstract Background Long-term care (LTC) is organized in a fragmented manner. Payer agencies (PA) receive LTC funds from the agency collecting funds, and commission services. Yet, distributional equity (DE) across PAs, a precondition to geographical equity of access to LTC, has received limited attention. We conceptualize that LTC systems promote DE when they are designed to set eligibility criteria nationally (vs. locally); and to distribute funds among PAs based on needs-formula (vs. past-budgets or government decisions). The objectives of this cross-country study is to highlight to what extent different LTC systems are designed to promote DE across PAs, and the parameters used in allocation formulae. Methods Qualitative data were collected through a questionnaire filled by experts from 17 OECD countries. Results 11 out of 25 LTC systems analyzed, fully meet DE as we defined. 5 systems which give high autonomy to PAs have designs with low levels of DE; while nine systems partially promote DE. Allocation formulae vary in their complexity as some systems use simple demographic parameters while others apply socio-economic status, disability, and LTC cost variations. Conclusions A minority of LTC systems fully meet DE, which is only one of the criteria in allocation of LTC resources. Some systems prefer local priority-setting and governance over DE. Countries that value DE should harmonize the eligibility criteria at the national level and allocate funds according to needs across regions. Key messages A minority of LTC systems in OECD countries fully meet distributional equity in allocation of resources across payer agencies. Countries that value distributional equity should harmonize the eligibility criteria to LTC at the national level and allocate funds according to needs across regions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 6 (11) ◽  
pp. 553-558
Author(s):  
Steve Meadows ◽  
Simon Jobson ◽  
Mary Kirk

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