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The Chicago hospital made sure Marure had a medical interpreter to translate a nurse's instructions into Spanish and convey her questions. Marure said it was the first time she understood her heart failure and why it was important for her to watch her weight - which can signal excess fluid. The hospital sent her home with a scale, made sure she had home care and a nurse called her periodically.
Even with all that, in less than three weeks, Marure was struggling to breathe again. A doctor sent her to a different hospital, where she was admitted for four days.
That patient's experience illustrates why heart failure is still a challenge, despite the new findings - as does the one-year death rate found in the study. The proportion of patients who died within a year after being discharged fell, but only slightly, from about 32 percent to about 30 percent during the decade.
"The death rate is still unacceptably high," said Dr. Mihai Gheorghiade of Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. Hospitals need to aggressively treat heart failure patients' other ailments and immediately schedule follow-up care after discharge, said Gheorghiade, who wrote an accompanying editorial in the journal.
"It is a sign of hope. However, we are far from achieving our goals," he said.
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