WEDNESDAY, Aug. 18 (HealthDay News) -- The Mountain states region
of the United States had the lowest average rate of potentially avoidable
hospitalization for heart failure in 2006, according to a U.S. government
report released Wednesday.
The rate in this region, which includes Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, Utah,
Nevada, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico, was 266 admissions per 100,000
people.
Potentially avoidable hospitalizations are admissions for care of
chronic illnesses that could be prevented if patients had good quality
outpatient care. Patients who receive poor quality outpatient care are at
increased risk for complications that require hospitalization, explained
the authors of the latest News and Numbers from the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality.
The next lowest rate of potentially avoidable hospital admissions for
heart failure was in the Pacific states (California, Oregon, Washington
and Alaska), at 316.5 admissions per 100,000, according to the report. The
other lowest rates were:
- West North Central (North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa,
Missouri, Minnesota, Kansas) at 362 per 100,000.
- New England (Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Vermont, Maine) at 364 per 100,000.
The report said the highest rates were in:
- East South Central region (Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky)
at 583 per 100,000.
- East North Central region (Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, and
Ohio) at 502 per 100,000.
- West South Central (Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana) at 496 per
100,000.
- Southeast (Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia,
West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware) at 460 per 100,000.
- Mid-Atlantic (New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania) at 430 per
100,000.
The report is based on data in the AHRQ State Snapshots, which provides
state-specific health care quality information.
More information
The American Heart Association has more about heart failure.
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