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Neighborhood and Environmental Factors and Post-Discharge Healthcare Utilization in HFpEF: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Background: Neighborhood-level social determinants of health influence cardiovascular outcomes; however, their association with post-discharge healthcare utilization in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) remains incompletely defined. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of 6,702 adults hospitalized for HFpEF (2014 to 2022). Patients were assigned to one of four neighborhood environments (NEnv-1 to NEnv-4) using a validated clustering framework based on ZIP code-level socioeconomic variables. The primary outcome was time to first HF readmission, evaluated within prespecified post-discharge intervals (0-30 days, >30-90 days, and >90-365 days). Secondary outcomes included HF-related healthcare re-encounters and HF hospitalization burden (0, 1, or [≥]2 admissions). Cox proportional hazards and multinomial logistic regression models were used. Results: Neighborhood environment was independently associated with post-discharge outcomes with distinct temporal patterns. Early (0-30 days) HF readmission risk was higher in NEnv-3 (aHR, 1.63) and NEnv-4 (aHR, 1.76), with similar increases in HF-related re-encounters (aHR, 1.72 and 1.84) persisting through the >30-90-day interval. In contrast, NEnv-2 demonstrated a delayed-risk pattern, with the highest risk occurring in the >90-365-day interval (readmission aHR, 3.42; re-encounter aHR, 3.45). All non-reference environments were associated with a higher likelihood of at least one post-index HF admission (aOR range, 1.84-2.24). NEnv-4 uniquely demonstrated higher odds of recurrent hospitalization ([≥]2 vs. 1 admission; aOR, 1.64). Conclusions: Neighborhood environment is associated with distinct, time-dependent patterns of HF utilization in HFpEF, including early, delayed, and recurrent risks. Incorporating neighborhood context may help identify when patients with HFpEF are most vulnerable after discharge and guide the timing of post-discharge interventions.
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