The report called for drugs to be made available
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Patients with heart failure should all have access to the best drugs for the condition, says a report from a medicines watchdog.
Heart failure, unlike a heart attack, happens when the heart gradually loses the ability to pump blood around the body efficiently.
It generally strikes elderly people, and is estimated to cost the NHS millions of pounds a year to treat.
The guidelines, released by the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (Nice), said that all heart failure patients should be considered for treatment
using Ace inhibitors and beta-blockers.
At present, only a small proportion of patients currently receive these drugs.
Nice also recommended wider use of a blood test which can be used to diagnose heart failure.
Healthy advice
Doctors should also encourage patients with
heart failure to take up regular exercise and quit smoking, it says, as well as making sure they are offered an annual flu jab and the single vaccination against pneumonia.
Professor Peter Littlejohns, Nice's clinical director, said the aim of the
guidelines was to "improve the length and quality of life for people with heart
failure".
Dr Roger Boyle, national director for heart disease, said: "Good quality
systematic care for this condition is key to improving outcomes and quality of
life for these patients and reducing the need for hospitalisation."
Growing problem
Approximately 900,000 people in the UK
have heart failure, with almost as many with damaged hearts, but at the moment
without any symptoms.
Access to key drugs to treat the condition, such as beta blockers, has so far
been limited to a small percentage of patients.
Heart failure accounts for about 5% of emergency admission to hospital.
The guideline was produced in conjunction with the Royal College of Physicians, and Dr Graham Archard, one of the GP advisers who helped put it together, said he was pleased with the result.
He said: "This guideline is of major importance to patients and all working in primary care.
"Most patients who develop heart failure initially present to their general practice surgery and most patients with heart failure are cared for by their GP team.