| Literature DB >> 27127639 |
Bridget Abell1, Paul Glasziou1, Tom Briffa2, Tammy Hoffmann1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Exercise training is a core component of cardiac rehabilitation (CR), however, little information exists regarding the specific exercise interventions currently provided for coronary heart disease in Australian practice. We aimed to analyse the current status of exercise-based CR services across Australia.Entities:
Keywords: CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE; QUALITY OF CARE AND OUTCOMES
Year: 2016 PMID: 27127639 PMCID: PMC4847132 DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2015-000374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Heart ISSN: 2053-3624
Figure 1Flow chart of survey participants and responses.
Demographics of Australian sites providing exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation
| Demographic | Number of sites (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Site location (n=251) | ||
| Metropolitan | 89 | (35.5) |
| Regional | 62 | (24.7) |
| Rural | 100 | (39.8) |
| Total time operating (n=239) (years) | ||
| <1 | 4 | (1.7) |
| 1–5 | 38 | (15.9) |
| >5–10 | 48 | (20.1) |
| >10 | 149 | (62.3) |
| Yearly number of patient enrolments (n=234) | ||
| <50 | 67 | (28.6) |
| 50–100 | 66 | (28.2) |
| 101–500 | 90 | (38.5) |
| >500 | 11 | (4.7) |
| Participation costs (n=235) | ||
| No cost to patient (public funding) | 160 | (68.1) |
| No cost to patient (private insurance coverage) | 30 | (12.8) |
| No cost to patient (both public and private funding) | 13 | (5.5) |
| Patient pays some or all of cost (eg, nominal session fee) | 32 | (13.6) |
Overall style and general characteristics of Australian exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation services
| Characteristic | Number of programmes (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Type of programme (n=251) | ||
| Comprehensive CR services offered for all patients | 180 | (72.3) |
| Modular (CR services offered vary by patient) | 57 | (22.9) |
| Exercise only | 9 | (3.6) |
| Non-CR specific chronic disease exercise classes | 5 | (2.0) |
| Content of programme (n=251) | ||
| Exercise training | 251 | (100) |
| Health education (eg, risk factors, chest pain management) | 245 | (97.6) |
| Dietary advice or counselling | 222 | (88.4) |
| Psychological advice or counselling | 217 | (86.5) |
| Medication education | 215 | (85.7) |
| Relaxation training | 189 | (75.3) |
| Smoking cessation | 166 | (66.1) |
| Programme setting for exercise (n=251) | ||
| Hospital outpatient centre | 204 | (81.3) |
| Community (eg, hall, park, local medical practice) | 46 | (18.3) |
| Home | 37 | (14.7) |
| Commercial gym | 12 | (4.8) |
| Programme staff (n=241) | ||
| Nurse | 213 | (88.4) |
| Dietitian/nutritionist | 198 | (82.2) |
| Physiotherapist | 185 | (76.8) |
| Pharmacist | 167 | (69.3) |
| Occupational therapist | 146 | (60.6) |
| Social worker | 126 | (52.3) |
| Allied health assistant/physiotherapy assistant | 92 | (38.2) |
| Exercise physiologist | 79 | (32.8) |
| Psychologist | 69 | (28.7) |
| Doctor (other than cardiologist) | 46 | (19.1) |
| Cardiologist | 34 | (14.1) |
| Cultural health worker | 28 | (11.6) |
| | ||
| Technology used to deliver programme, or support patients (n=228) | ||
| Telephone (motivation and support) | 62 | (27.2) |
| Videoconferencing (off-site education) | 13 | (5.7) |
| Internet (telehealth, off-site education) | 7 | (3.0) |
| Mobile phone (SMS reminders, smart phone applications) | 5 | (2.2) |
*Other professions added as additional text entries: diabetes educator (n=7), paramedic/ambulance officer (n=6), personal trainer (n=5), health promotion officer (n=4), drug and alcohol counsellor (n=3), peer (n=3), podiatrist (n=2), pastoral care (n=2).
CR, cardiac rehabilitation.
Characteristics of individual components of exercise training in Australian cardiac rehabilitation services
| Characteristic | Mean (SD) | Range | Responding sites, n | Variations reported, n | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duration of programme (weeks) | 7.0 | (1.7) | 3–14* | 246 | 260 |
| Frequency of exercise sessions (days per week) | 1.6 | (0.8) | 1–7 | 244 | 257 |
| Total number of exercise sessions in programme | 11.3 | (5.5) | 3–42 | 244 | 368 |
| Exercise session duration (min) | 55.5 | (13.4) | 15–120 | 235 | 235 |
| Exercise intensity (all converted to Borg scale) | 11–13† | 10–17 | 194 | 194 | |
*One described as ‘patient dependent’ and 10 as ‘ongoing’.
†Reported as the median response category.
Figure 2Frequency counts of exercise intensities routinely prescribed in programmes (n=194) grouped by method/scale. The colour of the bar represents the corresponding level of intensity (green= low; yellow= moderate; red=high, eg, green and yellow bars represent low to moderate intensity programmes). See online supplementary appendix 5 for the same results with intensity levels based on new classifications by the American College of Sports Medicine.