Tools geared toward care providers, patients, family members address stroke risk and quality of care
by Richard Quinn
The American College of Physicians Foundation (ACPF) has unveiled a quartet of new interventions aimed at improving care of atrial fibrillation (Afib) and stroke prevention.
Hospitalists are a core constituency for the tools, says Doron Schneider, MD, FACP, co-chair of the foundation's Initiative on Atrial Fibrillation and Stroke Prevention and medical director of the Center for Patient Safety and Healthcare Quality at Abington (Pa.) Health System.
"Atrial fibrillation is so common that the hospitalist is going to see it as primary diagnosis ... or as a background condition presenting with cellulitis and other conditions," Dr. Schneider says. "We want them to look at every patient, and if they have Afib, you don't want to treat the cellulitis and not treat the Afib because the Afib is not presenting. We want them to take a holistic approach."
The interventions are:
Dr. Schneider adds that for "real and sustained change in quality initiatives," physicians need to improve all parts of a problem. “If you don't have systems redesigned to allow for education to be delivered or to get content to doctors, it's never going to happen," he says. "A lot of material is produced in the world that never gets to the bedside."
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