City
Epaper

Only 3 out of 5 heart failure patients see cardiologist at least once a year: Study

By IANS | Updated: May 18, 2025 13:37 IST

New Delhi, May 18 Only around three out of five heart failure patients see a cardiologist at least ...

Open in App

New Delhi, May 18 Only around three out of five heart failure patients see a cardiologist at least once a year, according to new research released on Sunday.

The study, published in the European Heart Journal, shows that patients who do see a cardiologist once a year are around 24 per cent less likely to die in the following year.

It also shows which patients could benefit from seeing a cardiologist once a year and which patients should be seen more often. The research suggests that if cardiologists did see heart failure patients at least once a year, one life could be saved for every 11–16 patients seen.

“In patients with heart failure, the heart is unable to normalise blood flow and pressure. Heart failure can’t usually be cured, but with the right treatment, symptoms can often be controlled for many years. At the moment, depending on the patient and their condition, for example whether they have chronic or acute heart failure, they may or may not be seen by a cardiologist,” said Dr Guillaume Baudry from the Clinical Investigation Centre of Nancy University Hospital in France.

The study included all French patients living with heart failure in January 2020 who had been diagnosed in the previous five years -- 655,919 people in total.

These patients were found using French national medical administrative data. Researchers broke the group down according to whether they had been hospitalised with heart failure in the last year or the last five years, and whether or not they were taking diuretics as a treatment.

Diuretics help the body eliminate excess sodium through urine, which reduces the build-up of fluid in the body.

Among all groups of patients, researchers found that around two out of every five patients did not see a cardiologist over the course of a year.

Those who did see a cardiologist were less likely to die of any cause and less likely to be hospitalised with heart failure in the following year.

For patients who had been hospitalised in the last year, four appointments with a cardiologist were optimal. This reduced the risk from 34.3 per cent to 18.2 per cent, according to the study.

Dr Baudry said: “Although there are inherent limitations in observational research, our findings highlight the potential value of specialist follow-up, even in patients who appear clinically stable. Patients should feel encouraged to ask for a cardiology review, particularly if they have recently been in hospital or they are taking diuretics.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsGulbarga Mystics to face Mangaluru Dragons in season opener of Maharaja Trophy KSCA T20  

PunePune Accident: Two Killed as Diesel Tanker Collides with Motorcycle on Saswad-Narayanpur Road

Business237 Railways projects worth Rs 1,90,333 crore sanctioned in less than 4 years: Ashwini Vaishnaw

National237 Railways projects worth Rs 1,90,333 crore sanctioned in less than 4 years: Ashwini Vaishnaw

TechnologyIndia’s nuclear power capacity to touch 22,380 MW by 2031-32: Jitendra Singh

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyAditya Birla Real Estate clocks Rs 27 crore loss in Q1, income falls over 55 pc

TechnologyGoogle generated Rs 4 lakh cr app revenue, fostered developer jobs in India in 2024: Report

TechnologyDr. Reddy's Laboratories' net profit slumps 11 pc to Rs 14,09 crore sequentially in Q1

TechnologyInfosys’ Q1 net profit dips 1.6 pc sequentially to Rs 6,924 crore, revenue up

TechnologyED files FEMA complaint against SIMPL over Rs 913 crore FDI violation