| Literature DB >> 24083023 |
Melina Maria Trojahn1, Karen Brasil Ruschel, Emiliane Nogueira de Souza, Cláudia Motta Mussi, Vânia Naomi Hirakata, Alexandra Nogueira Mello Lopes, Eneida Rejane Rabelo-Silva.
Abstract
This study aimed to examine the predictors of better self-care behavior in patients with heart failure (HF) in a home visiting program. This is a longitudinal study nested in a randomized controlled trial (ISRCTN01213862) in which the home-based educational intervention consisted of a six-month followup that included four home visits by a nurse, interspersed with four telephone calls. The self-care score was measured at baseline and at six months using the Brazilian version of the European Heart Failure Self-Care Behaviour Scale. The associations included eight variables: age, sex, schooling, having received the intervention, social support, income, comorbidities, and symptom severity. A simple linear regression model was developed using significant variables (P ≤ 0.20), followed by a multivariate model to determine the predictors of better self-care. One hundred eighty-eight patients completed the study. A better self-care behavior was associated with patients who received intervention (P < 0.001), had more years of schooling (P = 0.016), and had more comorbidities (P = 0.008). Having received the intervention (P < 0.001) and having a greater number of comorbidities (P = 0.038) were predictors of better self-care. In the multivariate regression model, being in the intervention group and having more comorbidities were a predictor of better self-care.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24083023 PMCID: PMC3777135 DOI: 10.1155/2013/254352
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Res Pract ISSN: 2090-1429
Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics (n = 188).
| Characteristics | Intervention group | Control group |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | 91 (48.4) | 97 (51.5) | |
| Age, years* | 62.9 ± 13.5 | 62.9 ± 13 | 0.964 |
| Caucasian | 62 (68.1) | 64 (66.0) | 0.922 |
| Sex, male | 54 (59.3) | 61 (62.9) | 0.618 |
| Marital status, married | 58 (63.7) | 60 (61.9) | 0.530 |
| Social support, family | 82 (90.1) | 82 (85.4) | 0.330 |
| Schooling, years* | 6.81 ± 4.33 | 6.16 ± 4.28 | 0.317 |
| Income, total value in US dollars† | 600 (450–900) | 650 (387–900) | 0.698 |
| Duration of disease, years† | 5 (1.75–12.7) | 6 (3.5–11.5) | 0.216 |
| Etiology, ischemic | 25 (35.4) | 27 (32.9) | 0.166 |
| NYHA functional class‡ | 0.932 | ||
| I | 6 (6.9) | 9 (9.4) | |
| II | 35 (40.2) | 36 (37.5) | |
| III | 40 (46) | 44 (45.8) | |
| IV | 6 (6.9) | 7 (7.3) | |
| Ejection fraction* | 29.9 ± 10.8 | 31.4 ± 13.9 | 0.421 |
| Comorbidities | |||
| Systemic hypertension | 56 (61.5) | 70 (72.2) | 0.121 |
| Diabetes mellitus | 35 (38.5) | 34 (35.1) | 0.628 |
| Acute coronary syndrome | 25 (27.5) | 35 (36.1) | 0.206 |
Categorical variables are expressed as n (%), and continuous variables are expressed as *mean ± standard deviation or †median and 25th–75th percentiles; ‡New York Heart Association functional class; information was missing for 4 cases in the intervention group and 1 case in the control group.
Association between sociodemographic and clinical characteristics and the self-care score at the end of six months.
| Variables |
|
|---|---|
| Age | 0.400 |
| Sex | 0.101 |
| Years of schooling | 0.016 |
| Having received the intervention | 0.001 |
| Social support | 0.197 |
| Comorbidities | 0.008 |
| Symptom severity | 0.110 |
| Income | 0.073 |
Predictors of self-care at the end of six months in the model with six variables (n = 188).
| Predictor variables |
| SE |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention group | −7.51 | 0.97 | −0.49 | −7.73 | 0.000 |
| Sex | −1.34 | 1.04 | −0.08 | −1.28 | 0.200 |
| Years of schooling | −1.10 | 0.125 | −0.59 | −0.85 | 0.392 |
| Comorbidities | 0.66 | 0.308 | 0.14 | 2.16 | 0.038 |
| Social support | 1.35 | 1.52 | 0.58 | 0.852 | 0.373 |
| Income | −0.00 | 0.001 | −0.03 | −0.48 | 0.626 |
R 2 = 0.336—Coefficient of determination (general model).