| Literature DB >> 27799849 |
Aaron Conway1, Judith Sheridan2, Joanne Maddicks-Law3, Paul Fulbrook4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anxiety and depression are common after heart transplantation. This study aimed to pilot test the feasibility of a clinical model of psychological care for heart transplant recipients. The model of care involved nurse-led screening for anxiety and depression followed by referral for a course of telephone-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy as well as co-ordination of communication with on-going specialist and primary care services.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Cognitive behavioural therapy; Depression; Psychological; Screening; Transplantation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27799849 PMCID: PMC5080778 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-016-0183-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Fig. 1CONSORT Flow diagram
Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics
| Variable | Intervention | Control |
|---|---|---|
| Median (range) or Count (%) | Median (range) or Count (%) | |
| Age | 57 (43–70) | 61 (35–73) |
| Male | 4 (67) | 5 (71) |
| Years since transplant | 9 (2–19) | 10 (1–18) |
| Number of comorbidities | 8 (3–8) | 8 (7–10) |
| History of anxiety or depression disorder | 3 (50) | 1 (14) |
| Taking anti-depressants | 1 (14) | 2 (29) |
Baseline severity of psychological and immunosuppression-related symptoms and levels of health-related quality and treatment adherence
| Variable | Intervention | Control |
|---|---|---|
| PHQ-9 score | 9 (7–13) | 10 (8–18) |
| GAD-7 score | 4.5 (2–7) | 8 (7–10) |
| K-10 score | 19.5 (17–21) | 20 (16–25) |
| Difficulty with keeping scheduled follow-up visitsd | 5 (4–5) | 4 (4–5) |
| Difficulty with following a regular exercise programd | 2.5 (1–4) | 2 (1–3) |
| Difficulty with following a healthy and balanced dietd | 4 (2–4) | 2 (2–3) |
| Difficulty with having tests done as scheduledd | 5 (5–5) | 4 (4–5) |
| Difficulty with taking all medicines as prescribedd | 5 (5–5) | 4 (4–5) |
| Difficulty with side effects of medicinesd | 4.5 (2–5) | 4 (3–4) |
| Immunosuppression treatment adherencea | 100 (100–100) | 95 (90–98) |
| Number of immunosuppression-related symptoms experienced ‘almost always’ or ‘always’b | 6.5 (3–12) | 7 (3–12) |
| Physical functioningc | 70 (25–95) | 40 (15–55) |
| Role limitations due to physical healthc | 50 (0–75) | 25 (0–75) |
| Role limitations due to emotional problemsc | 0 (0–100) | 100 (0–100) |
| Energy/fatiguec | 27.5 (5–50) | 30 (20–35) |
| Emotional well-beingc | 70 (64–72) | 60 (60–64) |
| Social functioningc | 50 (50–63) | 50 (50–50) |
| Painc | 36 (33–48) | 50 (35–58) |
| General healthc | 53 (50–55) | 50 (40–50) |
IQR interquartile range, aRating of overall treatment adherence over the past 2 weeks on a scale of 0–100 (higher score = better adherence); bMTSOSD-59; cScores range from 0 to 100 with higher scores representing better health-related quality of life’; d1 = Very difficult, 5 = Very easy; PHQ-9 = Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item scale; GAD-7 = Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale; K-10 = Kessler Psychological Distress Scale