mortality Archives | Research & Innovation /research/tag/mortality/ Wed, 29 Jan 2025 19:56:51 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Despite benefits, heart failure clinics rarely used /research/2012/08/14/despite-benefits-heart-failure-clinics-rarely-used-2/ Tue, 14 Aug 2012 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/08/14/despite-benefits-heart-failure-clinics-rarely-used-2/ Outpatient heart failure clinics, which provide patient education on risk factor and ways to manage the condition, prescribe home-based exercises and monitor therapy compliance, have shown they reduce morbidity, mortality and health care costs, a new study has found. Published in the current issue of the Canadian Journal of Cardiology, the study reports that despite […]

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Outpatient heart failure clinics, which provide patient education on risk factor and ways to manage the condition, prescribe home-based exercises and monitor therapy compliance, have shown they reduce morbidity, mortality and health care costs, a new study has found.

Published in the current issue of the , the study reports that despite guidelines encouraging physicians to recommend heart failure clinics, few patients recently hospitalized with heart failure receive referrals or use one.

“Given the demonstrated benefits of these services, the rates of referral and enrollment in our study are discouragingly low,” says lead investigator Shannon Gravely (PhD ’11) of 91ɫ, the University Health Network and the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute. 91ɫ Professor Sherry Grace and Professor Liane Ginsburg both of 91ɫ’s Faculty of Health were also involved with the study.

Shannon Gravely

The investigators recruited 474 heart failure inpatients from 11 hospitals across Ontario. The patients completed a survey that evaluated environmental and individual factors affecting heart failure clinic use. Environmental factors included hospital type, whether the hospital had an onsite heart failure clinic and whether the patient had been referred to other outpatient disease management programs (DMP), such as smoking cessation clinics or diabetes education. Individual factors included socio-demographic information, whether the patient lived in a rural area, marital status, perceived stress and depressive symptoms. Clinical indicators of the need for rehabilitative services were gathered from patient charts.

A year after the first survey, the patients received a second survey. The 270 patients who completed the follow-up survey reported on whether they had been referred to a heart failure clinic and if they had attended.

Results showed that 15 per cent of study participants were referred to a heart failure clinic and 13 per cent reported using one. Patients with higher education were five times more likely to use an outpatient heart failure clinic compared to those with lower education. Lower stress levels and more serious health conditions were also associated with heart failure clinic use. Patients who received a referral to another DMP were nearly five times more likely to use a heart failure clinic. The most important factor in determining whether a patient used a heart failure clinic was the presence of an established program at the patient’s original hospital.

“It’s likely that having an HR clinic on-site is related to greater awareness of the benefits of such services by physicians providing care,” says Gravely. “However, broader referral mechanisms are needed to ensure that all patients, regardless of where they receive care, have equitable access to heart failure clinics.”

In a related study published in the same issue, Gravely and colleagues examined more broadly the use of DMPs by patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD). The survey looked at factors that influenced DMP use and was completed by 1,803 hospitalized patients, along with a follow-up study a year later which assessed whether they had used any DMPs, such as cardiac rehabilitation, outpatient diabetes education, a heart failure clinic, stroke rehabilitation or a smoking cessation program.

Overall, roughly 40 per cent of patients did not access any post-acute DMPs, 50 per cent accessed one program and 10 per cent attended more than one. Among participants with a comorbid indication (diabetes, stroke, heart failure or smokers), 21 per cent of these participants reported that they used multiple programs. DMP participants were younger, more likely to be married and more highly educated than those who did not attend DMPs.

Overall, 53 per cent reported participating in cardiac rehabilitation, and among participants with a comorbid illness or risk, 41per cent of diabetics reported attending a diabetes education center, 26 per cent of stroke patients attended stroke rehabilitation, 13 per cent of patients with a heart failure diagnosis used a heart failure clinic and 12 per cent of smokers attended a smoking cessation program. Among all study participants these findings suggest a gross underuse of DMP services, particularly stroke rehabilitation, heart failure clinics, and most notably, smoking cessation programs.

“What is one of the most concerning findings is that only 12 per cent of current smokers reported taking part in a smoking cessation program,” says Gravely. “Participation in smoking cessation programs results in significantly higher cessation rates when compared with standard care.”

Gravely notes that future research is needed to explore not only patient-related factors, but also health-system factors, such as awareness and capacity that may be at play. “The appropriateness and cost repercussions of multiple DMP use should be investigated, as an integrated approach to vascular disease management may be warranted.”

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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Professor Michael Greyeyes' dance production kicks off Harbourfront series /research/2011/09/19/professor-michael-greyeyes-dance-production-kicks-off-harbourfront-series-2/ Mon, 19 Sep 2011 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2011/09/19/professor-michael-greyeyes-dance-production-kicks-off-harbourfront-series-2/ 91ɫ theatre Professor Michael Greyeyes has choreographed and directed from thine eyes, a powerful new dance theatre work that examines mortality, memory and forgiveness, opening Sept. 22 at Harbourfront’s Enwave Theatre. This world premiere is the season opener for Toronto’s DanceWorks and kicks off Harbourfront Centre’s dance series NextSteps 11/12. The show is co-produced by […]

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91ɫ theatre Professor Michael Greyeyes has choreographed and directed from thine eyes, a powerful new dance theatre work that examines mortality, memory and forgiveness, opening Sept. 22 at Harbourfront’s Enwave Theatre.

This world premiere is the season opener for Toronto’s DanceWorks and kicks off Harbourfront Centre’s dance series NextSteps 11/12.

The show is co-produced by Native Earth Performing Arts and Signal Theatre, a company Greyeyes founded for this production.

Right: Ceinwen Gobert performs in from thine eyes

Greyeyes𱹱DZ from thine eyes in collaboration with Aboriginal writer Yvette Nolan. It is set to an original score composed by former 91ɫ theatre student Miquelon Rodriguez and Sharon Hann (BFA ‘06) designed the costumes.  

The title is taken from a passage in the Koran: "Lift the veil from thine eyes”. It refers to making the passage from this life into the next and seeing ourselves and others truthfully.  

The six performers, including dance grad Shannon Litzenberger (MA ‘05), express the struggle to find meaning at the end of their lives as they confront their deepest fears, most cherished memories and each other. 

“These thoughts about mortality came from conversations with my mother before she passed,” said Greyeyes. “In my culture [Plains Cree], we don’t view death as an end. It is the next step on a journey. For me as an Aboriginal artist, it’s essential that my company communicates my worldview and cosmology.” 

The cast has been rehearsing on campus in the Joan & Martin Goldfarb Centre for Fine Arts over the summer and moves into the Joseph G. Green Studio Theatre in the Centre for Film & Theatre next week for additional preparation. 

Left: Michael Greyeyes

91ɫ theatre Professor James McKernan is serving as technical director and has involved the production in colleague Peter McKinnon’s research project on sustainability in live performance. “Building on existing data and tools already in use in the construction industry, we’re using from thine eyes as a test piece to create a budgeting tool that tracks the carbon footprint of a show, similar to the way designers track financial expenditures on their materials,” said McKernan.  

The design team has been designing a shadow production, tracking the materials they would have used were sustainability not a factor. At the end of the production, the two tracking documents will be compared, so the sustainability gains can be measured. The extra time and work involved in designing two editions of the show and sourcing the most sustainable materials available is where support for the project from the Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada has been most valuable, McKernan noted. 

Left: James McKernan

“We’re learning that sustainability at this stage in the game is all about long-term planning,” he said. “We’ve found that the eco-option is rarely more expensive – it’s just sometimes harder to find and more time consuming to buy. Hopefully, as the demand grows and as designers learn the best sources for these materials, it will become even easier to reduce the impact of a production on our environment.” 

from thine eyes runs Sept. 22 to 24 at Harbourfront Centre’s Enwave Theatre. For more information and tickets, visit the ɱٱ.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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