scispace - formally typeset
S

Sally C. Inglis

Researcher at University of Technology, Sydney

Publications -  113
Citations -  4003

Sally C. Inglis is an academic researcher from University of Technology, Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heart failure & Health care. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 107 publications receiving 3447 citations. Previous affiliations of Sally C. Inglis include British Heart Foundation & University of Glasgow.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Telemonitoring or structured telephone support programmes for patients with chronic heart failure: systematic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: Programmes for chronic heart failure that include remote monitoring have a positive effect on clinical outcomes in community dwelling patients with chronic heart Failure.
Reference EntryDOI

Structured telephone support or telemonitoring programmes for patients with chronic heart failure

TL;DR: Structured telephone support and telemonitoring are effective in reducing the risk of all-cause mortality and CHF-related hospitalisations in patients with CHF; they improve quality of life, reduce costs, and evidence-based prescribing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Which components of heart failure programmes are effective? A systematic review and meta‐analysis of the outcomes of structured telephone support or telemonitoring as the primary component of chronic heart failure management in 8323 patients: Abridged Cochrane Review

TL;DR: This meta‐analysis reviewed randomized controlled trials of TM or STS for all‐cause mortality and all-cause and CHF‐related hospitalizations in patients with CHF, as a non‐invasive remote model of a specialized disease‐management intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structured telephone support or non-invasive telemonitoring for patients with heart failure

TL;DR: A recent Cochrane review demonstrated that both non-invasive telemonitoring and structured telephone support offer statistically and clinically meaningful benefits to people with heart failure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structured telephone support or non‐invasive telemonitoring for patients with heart failure

TL;DR: Neither structured telephone support nor telemonitoring demonstrated effectiveness in reducing the risk of all-cause mortality or heart failure-related hospitalisations in people with chronic heart failure.