Disparity of physician specialties in the management of chronic heart failure: trend analysis in Taiwan, 2000 - 2010.

2013 
OBJECTIVE: Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a condition that is daily confronted by clinicians in a variety of medical specialties, where physicians routinely seek optimum pharmacotherapy for their outpatients with CHF. We conducted a population- based study on pharmacotherapy for outpatients with CHF in Taiwan from 2000 to 2010, which focused on drug prescription patterns of different physician specialties. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrieved records from the National Health Insurance Research Database of patient ambulatory visits with diagnosed chronic heart failure, when cardiovascular drugs were prescribed. For purposes of this study, anti-chronic heart failure drugs were separated into categories: mortality reducing agents (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers, β-blockers, spironolactone, hydralazine plus nitrates) and symptom-relieving agents (digoxin, diuretics). Thereafter, the trends of prescription patterns related to different physician specialties were analyzed. RESULTS: From 2000 to 2010, the prescription rate of any mortality-reducing agent for CHF outpatients rose from 61.5% to 76.3% while the concomitant rate for digoxin decreased from 47.3% to 45.4%. Compared to internists and family physicians, cardiologists not only prescribed far more mortality-reducing agents from 2000 to 2010 (53.9 - 72.7%, 54.1 - 64.3%, 74.7 - 84.4%, respectively), but also prescribed two or three mortality-reducing drugs. CONCLUSION: There was a significant improvement of optimal pharmacotherapy for chronic heart failure in Taiwan. We observed that cardiologists were more aggressive than non-cardiologists when deciding whether to prescribe mortality-reducing drugs for heart failure management. However, those factors which influence the prescription patterns of internists and family physicians for their patients with CHF still require additional research.
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