Introduction
Supporting someone with heart failure can be difficult. Heart failure causes physical and emotional changes in a person, and he or she may need long-term care and support. You may feel stress and other problems while taking care of the person.
What do I need to know about heart failure?
Heart failure is a serious condition. It means that the heart cannot fill or pump enough blood and oxygen to support the body and its functions. This can cause damage to many parts of the body, including important organs.
The person with heart failure may:
Need to take medicines on a regular basis.
Need to have some procedures or surgery.
Require rehabilitation treatment.
Need to make changes in:
Lifestyle.
Diet.
Physical activity and exercise.
Planning for discharge from the hospital
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The treatments for heart failure.
Changes you have to make at home to make the person safe.
How to lower the risk of having other heart problems.
Diet and exercise changes for the person with heart failure.
Whether the person with heart failure will need help using the bathroom, bathing, eating, or doing other activities.
Whether you need to get special devices or equipment for the person with heart failure.
That heart failure requires emergency medical care if symptoms appear.
Caring for yourself
You may feel tired, isolated, anxious, and confused. You may also have a lot of stress. Your relationship with the person who has heart failure may change. It is normal to have many different emotions while caring for someone with heart failure.
As a caregiver, it is important:
To monitor yourself for signs of emotional, physical, and mental exhaustion (caregiver burnout). This can happen when you are overwhelmed.
To take care of yourself so that you can better meet the needs of your loved one and your own.
Signs of caregiver burnout
Sleep problems.
Difficulty concentrating.
Changes in appetite.
Depressed mood and mood swings.
Feeling emotionally out of
Heart failure may convey that the heart isn’t working anymore, but what it really means is that the heart isn’t pumping as well as it should be (REF). Heart failure is a chronic, progressive condition in which the heart muscle is unable to pump enough blood through to meet the body’s needs for blood and oxygen (REF). At first, the heart tries to make up for this by enlarging, developing more muscle mass, and pumping faster. As this happens, the blood vessels narrow to keep blood pressure up and the body diverts blood away from less important tissues and organs to maintain flow to the heart and brain (REF). Eventually, the body and heart cannot keep up and the patient begins to feel fatigue, breathing problems, weight gain with swelling in the feet, legs, ankles or stomach, and other symptoms that eventually leads to a hospital visit. The body’s coping mechanisms give us better understanding on why many are unaware of their condition until years after the heart declines (REF).
Heart failure is a chronic, progressive condition in which the heart muscle is unable to pump enough blood through to meet the body 's needs for blood and oxygen. Basically, the heart can 't keep up with its workload. American Heart Association Statistics (2016) reveals that heart failure accounts for 36% of cardiovascular disease deaths. Projections report a 46% increase in the prevalence of Heart Failure (HF) by 2030 by affecting over 8 million people above 18 years with the disease. Healthy People 2020 goals are focused on attaining high quality longer lives free of preventable diseases, promotion of quality of life, healthy development and healthy behaviors across all stages of life (Healthy People 2020, 2015).
Heart Failure is a progressive heart disease when the muscle of the heart is weakened so that it cannot pump blood as it should; the blood backs up into the blood vessels around the lungs and the other parts of the body (NHS Choice, 2015). In heart failure, the heart is not able to maintain a normal range cardiac output to meet the metabolic needs of the body (Kemp and Conte, 2012). Heart failure is a major worldwide public health problem, it is the end stage of heart disease and it could lead to high mortality. At present, heart failure is usually associated with old age, given the dramatic increase in the population of older people (ACCF/AHA, 2013). In the USA, there are about 5.7 million adults who have heart failure, about half of the people die within 5 years of diagnosis, and it costs the nation an estimated $30.7 billion each year (ACCF/AHA, 2013).
Congestive Heart Failure is a condition in which the heart is unable to pump a sufficient amount of blood for the body to function. If the heart’s ability to pump blood decreases, blood and fluids may start to pool into the lungs and accumulate in the legs, ankles, and feet causing an edema, shortness of breath, and fatigue. (Heart Failure, 2015, para. 2) The American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology defines heart failure as “a complex clinical syndrome that can result from any structural or functional cardiac disorder that impairs the ability of the ventricles to fill with or eject
Transitional care management includes services provided to patients whose medical problems require moderate or high complexity medical decision making during their transition from inpatient care to an outpatient setting. Transitional care for heart failure includes a collaborative effort by all health providers to ensure that the patient outcomes are improved. Key components of a transitional care plan for a heart failure patient includes identifying and assessing caregivers to determine their needs for education and support, integrating caregivers into the patient’s healthcare team, and bridging communications between patients, caregivers, and providers. Implementation of transitional care in a hospital setting should include comprehensive discharge planning, home visits, structured telephone support, scheduled follow up visits, and additional printed and online education and disease management information. In a meta-analysis of transitional care interventions to assess the efficacy, comparative effectiveness of transitional care interventions that reduce readmission and mortality rates for adults hospitalized with HF, concluded that home-visiting, multidisciplinary heart failure clinic interventions, and structured telephone support reduced heart failure specific readmission and mortality, and that these interventions should receive the greatest consideration by
Heart failure affects nearly 6 million Americans. It is the leading cause of hospitalization in people older than 65. Roughly 550,000 people are diagnosed with heart failure each year (Emory Healthcare, 2014). Heart failure is a pathologic state where the heart cannot pump enough blood to meet the demand of the body’s metabolic needs or when the ventricle’s ability to fill is impaired. It is not a disease, but rather a complex clinical syndrome. The symptoms of heart failure come from pulmonary vascular congestion and inadequate perfusion of the systemic circulation. Individuals experience orthopnea,
When nursing any patient with heart failure it is important to have an understanding of how the heart should work to understand how it stops working correctly. This knowledge is important as writtler (2006) (cited in Jones) feels that district nurses have little knowledge when it comes to heart failure. Patient, Writler (2006) feels that by understanding how the heart works and how it is damaged we, as district nurses will be able to recognise the signs of heart failure earlier7a?.
The heart is an organ that pumps oxygenated blood to the body and deoxygenated blood to the lungs. Heart failure is when the heart can’t pump blood very well. If the heart fails to work properly, a major system called the circulatory system won’t work properly and therefore the whole human body will fail to work properly because the cells won’t be able get oxygenated blood and use the oxygen to undergo cellular respiration and make energy.
Approximately 5.3 million Americans have heart failure and account for more hospital admissions than any other diagnosis in patients over 65
According to the American Heart Association (2015), heart failure is defined as “a chronic, progressive condition in which the heart muscle is unable to pump enough blood through to meet the body 's needs for blood and oxygen. Basically, the heart can 't keep up with its workload”. Congestive heart failure is a progressive illness that effects millions of Americans every year. Many other illnesses can lead to the development of congestive heart failure. Examples of these diseases include: coronary artery disease, past heart attack, high blood pressure, abnormal heart valve, heart muscle disease such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy or inflammation such as myocarditis, congenital heart disease, severe lung disease, diabetes, obesity and asthma. (American Heart Association, 2015 (Centers for
Heart failure (HF) is defined as a multifaceted clinical syndrome that can result from any structural or functional cardiac disorder that impairs the ability of the ventricle to fill with or eject blood. In HF, the heart may not provide tissues with adequate blood for metabolic needs, and cardiac-related elevation of pulmonary or systemic venous pressures may result in organ congestion1. In the United States, HF is increasing in incidence with about 5.1 million people suffering from HF and half of people who develop HF die within 5years 2. Over 75% of existing and new cases occurred in individuals over 65 years of age, < 1% in individuals below 60 years, nearly 10% in those over 80 years of age. HF costs the
Heart failure, HF, is a result of one’s heart inefficiently pumping blood out to the body (Lewis, Dirksen, Heitkemper and Bucher, 2014, p.766). A healthy heart will pump blood out of the left and right ventricles rhythmically and simultaneously, creating an even flow of blood from the heart to the pulmonary arteries and the aorta (Lewis et al., 2014, p.769). Someone with heart failure has a ventricular dysfunction in either one or both ventricles; the ventricles are not filling or contracting properly. The failure of one ventricle to properly function leads to an overcompensation of the opposite ventricle as well as a disruption in normal blood flow that leads
Heart failure is a long-term (chronic) condition in which the heart cannot pump enough blood through the body. When this happens, parts of the body do not get the blood and oxygen needed for them to function properly.
Congestive heart failure is an older name for heart failure. Congestive heart failure takes place when the heart is unable to maintain an adequate circulation of blood in the bodily tissues or to pump out the venous blood returned to it by the veins (Merriam-Webster). The heart is split into two distinct pumping structures, the right side of the heart and the left side of the heart. Appropriate cardiac performance involves each ventricle to extract even quantities of blood over intervals. If the volume of blood reimbursed to the heart develops more than both ventricles can manage, the heart can no longer be an efficient pump.
According to the Heart Foundation (2010), “Best-practice management of chronic heart failure (CHF) involves multidisciplinary care” (p. 3). A care coordinated with his different physicians including cardiologist, pulmonologist, and referring physicians, as well as clinical nurses, and dieticians will be an important step in Mr. P’s CHF care. As they are concerned about the mobility outside of their home, a telephonic follow-up after discharge from the hospital, and door delivery of medicines could be beneficial. It is also very important to help him to overcome his polypharmacy. Since Mrs. & Mr. P seem emotionally weak, they need emotional support to cope up with the situation. They are worried about the heaping medical bills. Provide information about the possibility of getting qualified for Medicaid/Medicare as well as grants from organizations like Patient Access Network