| Literature DB >> 28697722 |
Fiona McCartan1, Nicola Bowers2, Jack Turner3, Mirren Mandalia3, Nayan Kalnad3, Anna Bishop-Bailey4, Jiayu Fu5, Piers Clifford2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust (BHT) carried out a cardiac rehabilitation (CR) service redesign aimed at optimising patient recruitment and retention and decreasing readmissions.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac rehabilitation; Coronary heart disease; Emergency readmission; Patient engagement
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28697722 PMCID: PMC5504558 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-017-0606-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Overview of pre- and post-service design cardiac rehabilitation programme characteristics
| Cardiac rehabilitation service characteristics | Pre-implementation of Care4Today™ Heart Health Solutions | Post-implementation of Care4Today™ Heart Health Solutions |
|---|---|---|
| Records and record keeping | Mainly paper-based records and minimal record keeping - difficult to share across CR teams | Web-enabled secure technology platform providing a standardised and integrated pathway covering: |
| Interface with NACR | Duplication of data entry required for NACR, hospital systems and team records. | Enables uploads to NACR |
| Liaison between CR healthcare professionals | Informal, ad hoc and fragmented, with poor links with the heart failure team | Facilitates liaison between Cardiac Specialist Nurses and other healthcare professionals, including consultant cardiologists and General Practitioners |
| Integration of care with community services | Poor links between secondary care and community services | Provides integration between secondary care and community services |
| First assessments | Minimal first assessments carried out – done at first exercise session (including NACR Questionnaire 1) | Full initial assessment of eligible patients |
| Final assessments | No final assessments (other than NACR Questionnaire 2) | Full final assessment of eligible patients |
| Programme individualisation and goal setting | Minimal programme individualisation and goal setting | Provision of individualised programmes and goals for patients and management of patients throughout their CR programme |
| Educational sessions | Lacked consistency | Includes a full programme of exercise and educational sessions |
| Patient engagement initiatives | None | Includes patient/carer website allowing access to personalised care plan, progress, educational materials and an additional means of communication with the CR team. Included a patient focus group with feedback received from 122/350 participants. |
CR cardiac rehabilitation, NACR National Audit of Cardiac Rehabilitation
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients referred for cardiac rehabilitation (observational study)
| Cohort 1 | Cohort 2 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Entered CR | Declined CR | Overall | Entered CR | Declined CR | |
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |
| Age at index eventa (years) | 66.3 (11.5) | 66.2 (10.9) | 66.9 (13.4) | 66.7 (11.4) | 65.8 (11.4)d** | 71.1 (10.4) |
| Maleb | 259 (74.0%) | 196 (73.7%) | 63 (75.0%) | 261 (74.6%) | 223 (75.6%) | 38 (69.1%) |
| Index eventb | ||||||
| MI | 130 (37.1%) | 101 (38.0%) | 29 (34.5%) | 123 (35.1%) | 107 (36.3%) | 16 (29.1%) |
| PCI | 116 (33.1%) | 78 (29.3%) | 38 (45.2%) | 107 (30.6%) | 81 (27.5%) | 26 (47.3%) |
| CABG | 41 (11.7%) | 35 (13.2%) | 6 (7.1%) | 46 (13.1%) | 42 (14.2%) | 4 (7.3%) |
| HF | 6 (1.7%) | 4 (1.5%) | 2 (2.4%) | 20 (5.7%)e* | 19 (6.4%) | 1 (1.8%) |
| Angina | 3 (0.9%) | 3 (1.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 7 (2.0%) | 4 (1.4%) | 3 (5.5%) |
| ICD | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (0.3%) | 1 (0.3%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Other | 54 (15.4%) | 45 (16.9%) | 9 (10.7%) | 46 (13.1%) | 41 (13.9%) | 5 (9.1%) |
| Time from index event to dischargec (days) | 2.0 (1.0–6.0) | 2.0 (1.0–7.0) | 1.0 (0.0–4.0) | 2.0 (0.0–6.0), | 2.0 (0.0–6.0) | 2.0 (0.0–6.0), |
CR cardiac rehabilitation, MI myocardial infarction, PCI percutaneous coronary intervention, CABG coronary artery bypass grafting, HF heart failure, ICD implantable cardioverter defibrillator
Data presented as amean (SD), bn (%), or cmedian (interquartile range), dcomparing Cohort 2 patients entering and not entering CR; eadjusted P comparing Cohort 1 and Cohort 2 patients
* P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients referred for cardiac rehabilitation (service evaluation)
| Cohort 1 | Cohort 2 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Entered CR | Declined CR | Overall | Entered CR | Declined CR | |
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |
| Age at index eventa (years) | 66.6 (11.6) | 66.3 (10.9) | 67.7 (13.4) | 66.3 (12.5) | 65.5 (12.2)d*** | 69.9 (13.3) |
| Maleb | 414 (74.1%) | 305 (73.5%) | 109 (75.7%) | 590 (74.9%) | 489 (75.3%) | 101 (72.7%) |
| Index eventb | ||||||
| MI | 206 (36.9%) | 153 (36.9%) | 53(36.8%) | 248 (31.5%) | 216 (33.3%)d** | 32 (23.0%) |
| PCI | 173 (30.9%) | 112 (27.0%) | 61 (42.4%) | 256 (32.5%) | 191 (29.4%) | 65 (46.8%) |
| CABG | 79 (14.1%) | 70 (16.9%) | 9 (6.3%) | 99 (12.6%) | 90 (13.9%) | 9 (6.5%) |
| HF | 10 (1.8%) | 8 (1.9%) | 2 (1.4%) | 51 (6.5%)e*** | 42 (6.5%) | 9 (6.5%) |
| Angina | 5 (0.9%) | 5 (1.2%) | 0 (0.0%) | 15 (1.9%) | 9 (1.4%) | 6 (4.3%) |
| ICD | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (0.3%) | 1 (0.2%) | 1 (0.7%) |
| Other | 86 (15.4%) | 67 (16.1%) | 19 (13.2%) | 117 (14.8%) | 100 (15.4%) | 17 (12.2%) |
| Time from index event to dischargec (days) | 2.0 (1.0–7.0) ( | 3.0 (1.0–7.0) ( | 1.0 (0.0–4.3) | 2.0 (0.0–7.0) ( | 2.0 (0.0–7.0) | 2.0 (0.0–7.0) ( |
CR cardiac rehabilitation, MI myocardial infarction, PCI percutaneous coronary intervention, CABG coronary artery bypass grafting, HF heart failure, ICD implantable cardioverter defibrillator
Data presented as amean (SD), bn (%) or cmedian (IQR), dadjusted P comparing Cohort 2 patients entering and not entering CR; eadjusted P comparing Cohort 1 and Cohort 2 patients
* P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001
Fig. 1Emergency cardiac readmissions during 12-months of follow-up (observational study). a 30-day readmissions; b 6-month readmissions; c 12-month readmission
Fig. 2Emergency cardiac readmissions during 12-months of follow-up (service evaluation cohorts). a 30-day readmissions; b 6-month readmissions; c 12-month readmission
Cardiac rehabilitation participation (observational study)
| Cohort 1 | Cohort 2 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Completed | Did not complete CR | Overall | Completed CR | Did not complete CR | |
| ( | CR ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |
| Time from index to CR entry (days) | 51.1 (37.3–70.8)a*** | 52.5 (36.3–71.0) | 51.0 (40.0–69.3)e** | 41.0 (27.0–62.0) | 41.0 (27.0–64.0)d* | 39.5 (23.8–59.0) |
| Time from discharge to CR entry (days) | 46.0 (35.0–63.0)a***
| 47.0 (33.0–65.3) | 45.0 (37.0–63.0)e**
| 35.0 (23.0–56.0) | 36.0 (23.0–56.5)d* | 34.5 (23.0–51.5) |
| Duration of CR (days) | 42.0 (33.5–56.0)a***
| 49.0 (38.3–69.5) b*** | 42.0 (21.0–56.0)e**
| 72.0 (50.0–100.0) | 80.0 (64.0–107.0)d*** ( | 9.0 (1.0–43.0)c*** |
| CR sessions attended | 6.0 (4.0–7.0) | 6.0 (5.0–8.0)b*** | 5.0 (2.0–6.3)e*** | 6.0 (3.0–8.0) | 7.0 (5.0–9.0)d | 2.0 (1.0–4.0)c*** |
CR cardiac rehabilitation
acomparing Cohort 1 and Cohort 2; badjusted P, comparing Cohort 1 patients completing and not completing CR; cadjusted P, comparing Cohort 2 patients completing and not completing CR; dadjusted P, comparing Cohort 1 and Cohort 2 patients completing CR; eadjusted P, comparing Cohort 1 and Cohort 2 patients not completing CR
* P < 0.05, ** P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001
Cardiac rehabilitation entry and participation (service evaluation). Data presented as median (interquartile range)
| Cohort 1 | Cohort 2 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Completed CR | Did not complete CR | Overall | Completed CR | Did not complete CR | |
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |
| Time from index to entry into CR (days) | 50.0 (36.0–67.0)a*** | 51.0 (35.0–67.0) | 50.0 (37.0–67.3) e*** | 39.0 (23.0–61.0) | 39.0 (24.0–61.0) d*** | 38.0 (21.8–59.3) |
| Time from discharge to entry into CR (days) | 43.0 (33.0–61.0)a***
| 43.0 (30.0–61.0) | 43.0 (35.0–59.0) e*** ( | 32.0 (21.0–53.0) | 33.0 (21.0–55.0) d*** | 29.0 (20.0–50.3) |
| Duration of CR (days) | 42.0 (28.0–63.0)a***
| 49.0 (35.0–68.5) b***
| 42.0 (21.0–56.0) e***
| 71.0 (48.0–97.0) | 78.0 (64.0–105.0)d***
| 14.5 (1.0–43.0) c*** |
| CR sessions attended | 6.0 (3.0–7.0)a** | 6.0 (5.0–8.0)b*** | 5.0 (2.0–7.0)e*** | 6.0 (2.0–9.0) | 8.0 (5.0–9.0)d*** | 2.0 (1.0–4.0) c*** |
CR cardiac rehabilitation
acomparing Cohort 1 and Cohort 2; badjusted P, comparing Cohort 1 patients completing and not completing CR; cadjusted P, comparing Cohort 2 patients completing and not completing CR; dadjusted P, comparing Cohort 1 and Cohort 2 patients completing CR; eadjusted P, comparing Cohort 1 and Cohort 2 patients not completing CR
* P < 0.05. ** P < 0.01, *** P < 0.001
Reasons for discontinuing CR (service evaluation)
| Cohort 1 ( | Cohort 2 ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Achieved aims | 14 (6.0%) | 7 (4.2%) |
| Work commitments | 3 (1.3%) | 4 (2.4%) |
| Left this area | 0 (0.0%) | 8 (4.8%) |
| Hospital re-admission | 2 (0.9%) | 2 (1.2%) |
| Planned/emergency intervention | 3 (1.3%) | 1 (0.6%) |
| Too ill | 10 (4.3%) | 14 (8.3%) |
| Died | 1 (0.4%) | 4 (2.4%) |
| Other | 4 (1.7%) | 66 (39.3%) |
| Not recorded | 195 (84.1%) | 62 (36.9%) |
Data presented as n (%)
Fig. 3Patient satisfaction with the cardiac rehabilitation service. a Patient satisfaction at cardiac rehabilitation entry; b patient satisfaction at cardiac rehabilitation exit; c family and friends recommendation
Fig. 4Staff satisfaction with the cardiac rehabilitation service. Staff satisfaction pre-and post-implementation