Symptom Monitoring
Cross-source consensus on Symptom Monitoring from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
Uses
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Background
Evidence quality
Other
Highlighted claims
- Before diagnosis, the most frequently recorded symptoms were shortness of breath, depression, oedema and fatigue. — Association of symptoms at heart failure diagnosis with hospitalisation and mortality at 6 and 12 months: a retrospective cohort study using UK primary care health records
- At 12 months, all recorded symptoms were statistically significantly associated with all-cause hospitalisation. — Association of symptoms at heart failure diagnosis with hospitalisation and mortality at 6 and 12 months: a retrospective cohort study using UK primary care health records
- Symptoms recorded in routine primary care were significantly associated with imminent hospitalisation and death in people with heart failure. — Association of symptoms at heart failure diagnosis with hospitalisation and mortality at 6 and 12 months: a retrospective cohort study using UK primary care health records
- Symptoms recorded at 6 and 12 months post-diagnosis were generally more strongly associated with outcomes than symptoms recorded near the diagnosis date. — Association of symptoms at heart failure diagnosis with hospitalisation and mortality at 6 and 12 months: a retrospective cohort study using UK primary care health records
- Shortness of breath showed a protective association with mortality at diagnosis but shifted to increased mortality risk at 12 months. — Association of symptoms at heart failure diagnosis with hospitalisation and mortality at 6 and 12 months: a retrospective cohort study using UK primary care health records
- Under-recording of symptoms in primary care would bias associations toward the null, meaning observed associations likely underestimate true relationships. — Association of symptoms at heart failure diagnosis with hospitalisation and mortality at 6 and 12 months: a retrospective cohort study using UK primary care health records
- Symptom monitoring could be a simple, patient-centred and cost-effective way to identify high-risk people with heart failure in the community. — Association of symptoms at heart failure diagnosis with hospitalisation and mortality at 6 and 12 months: a retrospective cohort study using UK primary care health records