Heart Attack Survival Rates Rise
Americans aged 65 and older are becoming more likely to
survive the first month after hospitalization for a heart
attack .
That's according to a new study published in The Journal of the American
Medical Association.
Data came from more than 2.7 million people aged 65 and older who were
admitted to more than 4,000 U.S. hospitals for heart attack treatment between
1995 and 2006. During those years, a national effort was made to improve heart
attack care at hospitals.
The odds of dying in the first 30 days after heart attack survivors were
admitted to the hospital improved during the study period.
For instance, 18.9% of heart attack survivors aged 65 and older died from
any cause in the first 30 days after being admitted to the hospital in 1995,
compared to 16.1% in 2006. In 1995, 14.6% of heart attack patients died in the
hospital; in 2006, about 10% died in the hospital.
It's not that the patients were healthier in recent years. In fact, they
were more likely than earlier heart attack survivors to have conditions such as
high blood
pressure , diabetes , and previous history of
heart attacks.
Hospitals across the board, in terms of their quality of care, showed
improvement in survival rates for heart attack survivors.
The study doesn't show exactly why death rates dropped for heart attack
survivors, and the findings only apply to heart attack patients 65 and older,
note the researchers, who included Harlan Krumholz, MD, SM, of the
cardiovascular medicine section of Yale University's medical school.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
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