(Press-News.org) The risk of dying is six times higher among patients who become short of breath after being admitted to hospital, according to research published today (Monday) in ERJ Open Research [1]. Patients who were in pain were not more likely to die.
The study of nearly 10,000 people suggests that asking patients if they are feeling short of breath could help doctors and nurses to focus care on those who need it most.
The study is the first of its kind and was led by Associate Professor Robert Banzett from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA. He said: “The sensation of dyspnoea, or breathing discomfort, is a really unpleasant symptom. Some people experience it as feeling starved or air or suffocated. In hospital, nurses routinely ask patients to rate any pain they are experiencing, but this is not the case for dyspnoea. In the past, our research has shown that most people are good at judging and reporting this symptom, yet there is very little evidence on whether it’s linked to how ill hospital patients are.”
Working with nurses at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, who documented patient-reported dyspnoea twice per day, the researchers found that it was feasible to ask hospital patients to rate their dyspnoea from 0 to 10, in the same way they are asked to rate their pain. Asking the question and recording the answer only took 45 seconds per patient.
Researchers analysed patient-rated shortness of breath and pain for 9,785 adults admitted to the hospital between March 2014 and September 2016. They compared this with data on outcomes, including deaths, in the following two years.
This showed that patients who developed shortness of breath in hospital were six times more likely to die in hospital than patients who were not feeling short of breath. The higher patients rated their shortness of breath the higher their risk of dying. Patients with dyspnoea were also more likely to need care from a rapid response team and to be transferred to intensive care.
Twenty-five per cent of patients who were feeling short of breath at rest when they were discharged from hospital died within six months, compared to seven per cent mortality among those who felt no dyspnoea during their time in hospital.
Conversely, researchers found no clear link between pain and risk of dying.
Professor Banzett said: “It is important to note that dyspnoea is not a death sentence – even in the highest risk groups, 94% of patients survive hospitalisation, and 70% survive at least two years following hospitalisation. But knowing which patients are at risk with a simple, fast, and inexpensive assessment should allow better individualised care. We believe that routinely asking patients to rate their shortness of breath will lead to better management of this often-frightening symptom.
“The sensation of dyspnoea is an alert that the body is not getting enough oxygen in and carbon dioxide out. Failure of this system is an existential threat. Sensors throughout the body, in the lungs, heart and other tissues, have evolved to report on the status of the system at all times, and provide early warning of impending failure accompanied by a strong emotional response.
“Pain is also a useful warning system, but it does not usually warn of an existential threat. If you hit your thumb with a hammer, you will probably rate your pain 11 on a scale of 0-10, but there is no threat to your life. It is possible that specific kinds of pain, for instance pain in internal organs, may predict mortality, but this distinction is not made in the clinical record of pain ratings.”
The researchers say their findings should be confirmed in other types of hospital elsewhere in the world, and that research is needed to show whether asking patients to rate their shortness of breath leads to better treatments and outcomes. “The latter is a difficult study to do because simply knowing about a patient’s dyspnoea status will prompt clinicians to do something, and you can’t tell them not to do it just for the purposes of having a control group for your study. I am retired and my laboratory is closed, but I do hope others will pursue the next steps. I’m confident that some smart young person will figure it out,” Professor Banzett added.
Professor Hilary Pinnock is Chair of the European Respiratory Society’s Education Council, based at the University of Edinburgh and was not involved in the research. She said: “Historically, the monitoring of vital signs in hospitalised patients includes respiratory rate along with temperature and pulse rate. In a digital age, some have questioned the value of this workforce-intensive routine, so it is interesting to read about the association of subjective breathlessness with mortality and other adverse outcomes.
“Breathlessness was assessed on a 0-10 scale which took less than a minute to administer. These noteworthy findings should trigger more research to understand the mechanisms underpinning this association and how this ‘powerful alarm’ can be harnessed to improve patient care.”
Dr Cláudia Almeida Vicente is Chair of the European Respiratory Society’s General practice and primary care group and a GP in Portugal and was not involved in the research. She said: “Feeling short of breath can be a very unpleasant symptom and it can be caused by a variety of problems including asthma, a chest infection, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and even heart failure.
“This study highlights how a simple dyspnoea rating can serve as a strong, early warning sign of clinical decline. New-onset breathlessness during hospitalisation carried especially high risk, far exceeding that associated with pain. For inpatient teams, any rise in dyspnoea should prompt rapid reassessment and closer monitoring.
“From a primary care perspective, the elevated two-year mortality in patients discharged with dyspnoea signals the need for tighter post-hospital follow-up. These patients may benefit from early visits, medication review, and proactive management of cardiopulmonary disease. A quick dyspnoea score offers powerful prognostic value and should inform both inpatient decisions and outpatient planning.”
END
Hospital patients who feel short of breath are six times more likely to die
No increased risk found for patients who are in pain
2025-11-10
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Existing evidence does not clearly link paracetamol use during pregnancy with autism or ADHD in children
2025-11-10
Existing evidence does not clearly link paracetamol (acetaminophen) use during pregnancy with autism or ADHD in children, finds an in-depth evidence review published by The BMJ today, in direct response to recent announcements around the safety of using paracetamol in pregnancy.
The researchers say confidence in the findings of existing evidence reviews and studies on this topic is low to critically low, and suggest that any apparent effect seen in previous studies may be driven by shared genetic and environmental factors within families.
Regulatory bodies, clinicians, pregnant women, parents, and those affected by autism and ADHD should be informed ...
Should kids be screened for high cholesterol genes?
2025-11-09
Nov. 9, 2025--In the United States, one in every 250 people has inherited a genetic variant that leads to dangerously high cholesterol levels from birth.
If high cholesterol isn’t lowered early, people with this genetic condition, called familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), have a high risk of having a heart attack or stroke as early as their 30s or 40s. But only about 1 in 10 of people living with FH (1.5 million Americans) is aware of their condition.
A new modeling study conducted by researchers at Columbia and Harvard Universities finds ...
Weight loss drugs don’t increase the risk of pancreatitis or adverse cardiac events in patients with high triglycerides
2025-11-09
In a major new study, researchers from Intermountain Health in Salt Lake City have found that weight loss drugs used by patients who have high triglycerides do not increase their risk of pancreatitis or adverse cardiac events.
Since the first GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP1RAs), more commonly known now as weight loss drugs, were approved in 2005, some clinicians have been hesitant to prescribe them to people who have very high triglycerides. That’s because these patients are typically at high risk of pancreatitis, and the drugs interact with the pancreas.
In the new study, Intermountain researchers found that ...
Major international study confirms that beta-blockers are no longer needed in post-infarction patients with normal heart function
2025-11-09
A major analysis led by the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC), in collaboration with international institutions, has pooled data from 17,801 myocardial infarction survivors with preserved cardiac function enrolled in five global clinical trials. The study concludes that beta-blockers offer no clinical benefit for this patient group, which today represents the majority of infarction survivors. The study was made possible by close collaboration between CNIC researchers and the ...
Targeted vitamin D3 supplementation cuts risk of heart attack patients having a second heart attack in half, new intermountain health study finds
2025-11-09
A tailored approach of vitamin D3 supplementation in patients who have suffered a heart attack significantly reduces their risk of a second heart attack, a new study from heart researchers at Intermountain Health in Salt Lake City finds.
In a large, randomized clinical trial, Intermountain Health researchers have found that treating heart attack patients in a “target to treat” fashion, where patients’ blood levels of vitamin D were monitored and vitamin D3 dosing adjusted to achieve optimal levels, cut their risk of a second heart attack in half.
Results of the study were presented on Nov. 9 at the 2025 American Heart Association Scientific ...
Any form of hypertension during pregnancy significantly increases postpartum cardiovascular risk including death, new study finds
2025-11-09
A new study from researchers at Intermountain Health reveals that hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP) significantly increase the risk of cardiovascular complications — including heart attack, stroke, heart failure, and death — within five years of giving birth.
The study found that women who experienced HDP during pregnancy were significantly more likely to develop serious cardiovascular-related issues compared to those without HDP. These findings underscore the growing body of evidence over the past two decades linking pregnancy-related hypertension to ...
Opening all blocked arteries with stents reduces risk of death from cardiovascular causes compared with opening only the culprit artery in heart attack patients
2025-11-09
Opening all blocked arteries with stents in patients with a heart attack, known as complete revascularization, reduces the risk of death from cardiovascular causes, death from any cause and future heart attacks compared with opening only culprit artery causing the heart attack according to a new, large international study led by researchers at the Population Health Research Institute (PHRI), a joint organization of McMaster University and Hamilton Health Sciences.
The results were published simultaneously in The Lancet and presented in a Late-Breaking Clinical Science Featured Research ...
More prenatal visits linked to right level of care for infants born with heart defects
2025-11-09
In cases of mild congenital heart defects, more prenatal visits are associated with greater likelihood of appropriate delivery at a community hospital, according to a study published in JAMA Network Open. Results suggest that more prenatal care is beneficial for families and may allow their newborns with mild heart defects to receive the right level of care closer to home, as opposed to traveling to a regional cardiac surgical center, which can be expensive, taxing and stressful for families.
Congenital heart defects are the most common and resource-intensive birth defects in the United States. Infants with the most complex heart defects are usually directed ...
Drink Up: Coffee is safe for people with A-Fib
2025-11-09
Drinking coffee can protect against atrial fibrillation (A-Fib), a common heart rhythm disorder that causes rapid, irregular heartbeat and can lead to stroke and heart failure.
Doctors typically recommend that people with heart issues like A-Fib avoid caffeine out of fear that it will trigger symptoms. But a study by UC San Francisco and the University of Adelaid has concluded that drinking a cup of caffeinated coffee a day reduced A-Fib by 39%.
“Coffee increases physical activity which is known to reduce atrial fibrillation,” said Gregory M. Marcus, MD, MAS, ...
Study reports on global trends in acute kidney injury– related mortality
2025-11-08
Houston, TX (November 8, 2025) — A 5-year study revealed a stability of globalacute kidney injury (AKI)–related mortality rates with differing patterns that indicate a rising concentration of mortality in older populations and higher socioeconomiccountries. The findings will be presented at ASN Kidney Week 2025 November 5– 9.
When investigators at the Kyung Hee University Hospital in Seoul assessed AKI-related mortality trends in 43 countries from 1996–2021 using the WHO MortalityDatabase, they ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New study gives people with eczema freedom to choose how often to bathe
Children’s dental health still very poor despite interventions
Hospital patients who feel short of breath are six times more likely to die
Existing evidence does not clearly link paracetamol use during pregnancy with autism or ADHD in children
Should kids be screened for high cholesterol genes?
Weight loss drugs don’t increase the risk of pancreatitis or adverse cardiac events in patients with high triglycerides
Major international study confirms that beta-blockers are no longer needed in post-infarction patients with normal heart function
Targeted vitamin D3 supplementation cuts risk of heart attack patients having a second heart attack in half, new intermountain health study finds
Any form of hypertension during pregnancy significantly increases postpartum cardiovascular risk including death, new study finds
Opening all blocked arteries with stents reduces risk of death from cardiovascular causes compared with opening only the culprit artery in heart attack patients
More prenatal visits linked to right level of care for infants born with heart defects
Drink Up: Coffee is safe for people with A-Fib
Study reports on global trends in acute kidney injury– related mortality
Study reveals a potentially better way to optimize the timing for kidney transplant waitlisting
Transitional dialysis program in Texas decreased the use of emergency dialysis
Quality improvement intervention may help prevent deaths from metformin-associated lactic acid
Conservative care versus dialysis: model indicates which is best for individual patients with advanced chronic kidney disease
Coronary artery calcium may be a predictor for all-cause mortality, including medical conditions not related to heart health
Minimally invasive coronary calcium CT scans used to determine heart disease risk are effective at finding other potential health problems
High-impact clinical trials generate promising results for improving kidney health - part 3
Mass General Brigham researchers find PCSK9 inhibitor reduced risk of first heart attack, stroke
Triglyceride-lowering drug significantly reduced rate of acute pancreatitis in high-risk patients
Steatotic liver disease and cancer: From pathogenesis to therapeutic frontiers
SGLT2 inhibitors and kidney outcomes by glomerular filtration rate and albuminuria
Comprehensive analysis supports routine use of metabolic drug for people with all levels of kidney function
Temporary benefit for immune system in early HIV treatment, but dysregulation returns
Chronic kidney disease is now the ninth leading cause of death
Chronic kidney disease has more than doubled since 1990, now affecting nearly 800 million people worldwide
Participant experiences in a kidney failure care intervention in the navigate-kidney study
Community health worker support for Hispanic and Latino individuals receiving hemodialysis
[Press-News.org] Hospital patients who feel short of breath are six times more likely to dieNo increased risk found for patients who are in pain