Heartways Therapy
Symptoms of Heart Failure
Heart Failure Zones
Hospitalization Prevention
Heart Failure Medications
100

This therapy intervention offers numerous benefits, such as improvements in Balance, Muscle Strength, Endurance, and General Well-Being.

What is Exercise?

100

The term used when you have difficulty breathing or shortness of breath.

Dyspnea

100

Your patient is in this zone if they report increased coughing and needing extra pillows to sleep.

What is Yellow Zone?

100

The most stressed diet item in the HF regimen, this is often found in high volumes in canned and processed foods.

What is Salt/Sodium?

100

These medications reduce the amount of fluid in the body. They are among the most important medicines in helping control fluid buildup in the body.

Diuretics (Lasix, Bumex, Furosemide)

200

This therapy intervention is guided by the 4 P's (Planning, Prioritization, Pacing, Positioning) to prevent fatigue and worsening symptoms, so that our patient's can safely get through their day without risk of exacerbation.

What is Energy Conservation?

200

This symptom involves swelling in the ankles, legs, and abdomen.

Edema

200

Your patient is in this zone if there is no new SOB, swelling, or weight gain.

What is Green Zone?

200

This essential daily activity should be performed upon waking, after you empty your bladder and before eating or drinking. 

What is Taking Weight / Measuring Weight?

200

Pain medications you are told to avoid as they make you retain fluid

NSAIDS (Ibuprofen, Naproxen..)

300

This 1-10 scale is in our Heartways Journal and is used by patients to grade how hard their body is working during physical activity.

What is the Rate of Perceived Exertion (RPE) Scale?

300

This symptom involves feeling tired or weak.

Fatigue

300

Your patient is in this zone if they are SOB all the time, have a loss of appetite, and/or present with confusion/anxiety.

What is Red Zone?

300

This Key Hospitalization Prevention Tool should be reviewed at every clinician visit, as well as reviewed daily by our patients to help them stay in the Zone.

What is the Heart Failure Zone Tool?

300

These medications prevent blood clots from forming. They do not break up clots you already have, but they can stop those clots from getting bigger.

Blood Thinners (Warfarin, Coumadin)

400

This key measure represents the patient's capacity to safely sustain necessary or desired physical and mental tasks. 

What is Activity Tolerance?

400

You may feel this symptom when you have a rapid or irregular heartbeat.

Palpitations

400
What action should your patient take when they notice chest pain or tightness that does not go away?

What is call 911 or go to the Emergency Room?

400

This check-up completed within 2 weeks of discharge from Hospital is proven to reduce Heart Failure Readmissions.

What is a Provider/Physician Follow Up Visit?

400

This class of medications is often prescribed to help slow the heart rate down, Lowers BP’s, and Helps the heart pump more efficiently over time.

Beta-Blockers (Metoprolol, Coreg, Bisoprolol)

500

This condition treated through therapeutic interventions and present in 80% of Heart Failure patients is a distinct biological syndrome characterized by a decline in physical and cognitive reserve, leading to increased vulnerability to stressors and decreased ability to recover.

What is Frailty?

500

This persistent symptom, often considered "dry," happens when you have fluid buildup in the lungs. It often keeps you awake at night when you lay down.

Coughing

500

Your patient is in this zone when they have 2+ pitting edema in Bilateral ankles at SOC and you see them with 2+ pitting edema in Bilateral ankles in their 2nd week of the episode.

What is the Green Zone?

500

This is a daily record of key indicators that our Aveanna Heartways patients track to identify early changes that may warrant intervention to prevent hospitalization.

What is Aveanna Heartways Journal or CHF Patient Monitoring Log?

500

Your doctor may prescribe one of these 3 medication classes to help ease the load on your heart, lower your blood pressure, and help you feel less short of breath.

ACE Inhibitors (Angiotensin Converting Enzyme)

ARNI (Angiotensin Receptor-Neprilysin Inhibitors)

ARBs (Angiotensin Receptor Blockers)