Follow-up plan for heart patients to save hospital HK$12m a year
Eastern Hospital has launched a programme to improve follow-up care for patients of congestive heart failure, in a move expected to save the hospital HK$12 million a year.
Loretta Yam Yin-chun, the Hospital Authority's Hong Kong East cluster chief, said yesterday a multidisciplinary team was set up at the hospital last month to provide better post-discharge management plans, re-admission risk assessment, counselling and education for patients who suffered congestive heart failure.
When a patient has the condition, his or her heart cannot pump enough blood through the body normally. Patients may suffer shortness of breath when walking too fast or exercising too much.
Dr Yam said the disease was particularly concerning because it resulted in the third most admissions to public hospitals.
In 2005, Eastern Hospital admitted 2,433 congestive heart failure patients, or about 7 per cent of its total admissions.
On average, each patient stayed 6.7 days.
'The re-admission rate of the congestive heart failure patients is very high, about 60 per cent,' Dr Yam said.