Get With The Guidelines- Coronary Artery Disease Initial Achievement Award recognizes excellence in secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease and primary prevention of stroke
Central Carolina Hospital recently received the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines -Coronary Artery Disease (GWTG-CAD) Initial Achievement Award. The award recognizes Central Carolina Hospital’s commitment and success for one quarter or 90-days in implementing a higher standard of cardiac care that effectively improves treatment of patients hospitalized with coronary artery disease.
Under the GWTG-CAD program, patients are started on aggressive risk reduction therapies such as cholesterol-lowering drugs, aspirin, ACE inhibitors and beta-blockers in the hospital and receive smoking cessation and weight management counseling and referrals for cardiac rehabilitation before they are discharged. Hospitals that receive the award have demonstrated that during one quarter at least 85 percent of its eligible coronary patients (without contraindications) are discharged following the American Heart Association’s recommended treatments.
“The American Heart Association applauds Central Carolina Hospital for its success in implementing the appropriate standards of care and protocols to reduce the number of recurrent events in coronary patients,” said Gray Ellrodt, M.D., the American Heart Association volunteer chairman for the national Get With The GuidelinesSM. “Central Carolina Hospital is well above the national average in terms of implementing these life-saving treatments.”
Projections have shown that implementation of cardiovascular disease secondary prevention guidelines nationwide, as promoted in the GWTG-CAD program, could result in saving more than 80,000 lives each year.
“Central Carolina Hospital is dedicated to making our cardiac unit among the best in the country, and the American Heart Association’s Get With The GuidelinesSM program is helping us accomplish that by making it easier for our professionals to improve the long-term outcomes of our cardiac patients,” said Dale Armstrong, chief executive officer of Central Carolina Hospital. “We are pleased to be recognized for our dedication and achievements in cardiac care.”
The American Heart Association’s GWTG-CAD program helps hospitals increase the use of and adherence to the association’s secondary prevention guidelines for coronary artery disease. Developed to assist healthcare professionals follow proven standards and procedures before patients are discharged, GWTG-CAD can help Central Carolina Hospital reduce the risk of recurrent heart attacks and death in treated patients. The program, which works by mobilizing teams in acute care hospitals to implement American Heart Association / American College of Cardiology secondary prevention guidelines, was developed with support from an unrestricted educational grant from Merck & Co., Inc.
According to the American Heart Association, more than 450,000 people suffer a recurrent heart attack each year. Statistics also show that within one year of an attack, 25 percent of men and 38 percent of women will die. Within six years after a heart attack, about 22 percent of men and 46 percent of women will be disabled with heart failure.
The American Heart Association’s Get With The GuidelinesSM program is being implemented in hospitals around the country. For more information, visit americanheart.org/getwiththeguidelines.
ABOUT CENTRAL CAROLINA HOSPITAL
Central Carolina Hospital, part of Tenet North Carolina, is a 137-bed acute care hospital located at 1135 Carthage Street in Sanford, N.C. Central Carolina Hospital has been serving the medical and health care needs of Lee County and surrounding counties since 1913. Central Carolina Hospital offers a wide range of programs and services including emergency services, outpatient rehabilitation programs, diagnostic radiology, inpatient and outpatient surgery, and maternity services. Central Carolina Hospital also provides cardiology services including cardiac catheterization, echocardiography and cardiopulmonary rehabilitation programs. The hospital is accredited by the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, the nation’s oldest and largest hospital accreditation agency. To learn more about Central Carolina Hospital, visit www.centralcarolinahosp.com.
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