| Literature DB >> 30559161 |
Hannah Ranaldi1, Carolyn Deighan1, Louise Taylor1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The Heart Manual (HM) is the UK's leading facilitated home-based cardiac rehabilitation (CR) programme for individuals recovering from myocardial infarction and revascularisation. This audit explored patient-reported outcomes of home-based CR in relation to current Scottish, UK and European guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac rehabilitation; evidenced based; guidelines; home-based; patient experience; patient reported outcomes
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30559161 PMCID: PMC6303573 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-024499
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Facilitation procedure of the Heart Manual programme. (BACPR, British Association for Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation; GP, general practitioner; MI, myocardial infarction.
Figure 2Visual representation of the analysis.
Representative quotes of themes
| Theme | |
| Subtheme | Representative quote (Q) |
| 1. Health behaviour change/modifiable risk reduction | |
| Guidance | Q1 ‘What to do to tackle being overweight’. |
| Q2 ‘The risk factors and how to beat it’. | |
| Q3 ‘Ways to include regular exercise in my day’. | |
| Q4 ‘Exercise description and reason given for the exercise gave me incentive to continue in the early days’. | |
| Q5 ‘What to eat’. | |
| Engaging | Q6 ‘More exercise and healthier eating habits’. |
| Q7 ‘Regular daily exercise and routine has certainly increased my fitness and recovery levels’. | |
| Q8 ‘Stopping smoking’. | |
| Q9 ‘I’ve stopped smoking, I’m eating better and I’m doing more exercise especially walking’. | |
| Q10 ‘I’ve lost some weight but not a lot else. I was already very active with a vegan diet. Non smoker/drinker etc’. | |
| Awareness | Q11 ‘More aware of the importance of lifestyle consideration’. |
| Q12 ‘A much livelier awareness of the importance of a healthier diet’. | |
| Q13 ‘Awareness of food labelling. Awareness of the need to practise relaxation’. | |
| Q14 ‘The awareness of need to maintain regular exercise. Also to pay more attention to diet’. | |
| Q15 ‘Consciously thinking about reducing risk factors’. | |
| Q16 ‘More aware of things to do on a daily basis for example, walking and exercising especially and to pace myself’. | |
| Consequences | Q17 ‘I am more energetic and far more active’. |
| Q18 ‘I am more relaxed and have lost weight’. | |
| Q19 ‘General health has improved. Walking more’. | |
| Q20 ‘Restored my love for exercise. Closer to wife with walks taken together and chance to talk openly. Careful with food. Positive lost over 1.5 stone so far!’. | |
| Q21 ‘Restricted my hobbies’. | |
| Q22 “As a racing cyclist I will miss the racing and training, just going out for fun won’t be the same. I will still go out to keep fit’. | |
| Attitude | Q23 ‘Change of attitude to exercise, diet and lifestyle’. |
| Q24 ‘My whole outlook on my lifestyle - that is, how to exercise properly, how and what to eat, that will help me to recover’. | |
| Q25 ‘I now have a determination to put general health issues before anything else, when you feel well everything in life is more enjoyable’. | |
| Q26 ‘Contentment - how to care for your body. How to enjoy life, and to understand life in general’. | |
| Q27 ‘Appreciate life more’. | |
| No change | Q28 ‘Nothing much - I am still a carer for my husband who is permanently in a wheelchair and has cancer. I feel much better walking everywhere without pain in stomach and chest’. |
| Q29 ‘No great change - always had healthy lifestyle’. | |
| Motivation For change | Q30 ‘More committed to healthier lifestyle’. |
| Q31 ‘The incentive to get walking and exercising’. | |
| 2. Psychosocial support | |
| Stress management | Q32 ‘Learning about controlling stress was very very good. I do not worry about things any more, and this makes my life a lot happier’. |
| Q33 ‘More assertive about prioritising my needs. Accepting help from others/realising I cannot (will not) do as I did’. | |
| Q34 ‘I don’t smoke or drink. I have had a lot of stress at work and family history with heart disease so the reduction of stress/relaxation has been very helpful’. | |
| Q35 ‘Sections on stress and anxiety’. | |
| Pacing | Q36 ‘I was very active for a 76 year old. Now I take life a little slower. I do just as much but over a longer period’. |
| Q37 ‘Considering some activities prior to acting as to their benefits etc.’. | |
| Q38 ‘I think I have learnt to listen to my body and not rush things!’ | |
| Q39 ‘To try pace myself and to admit when in trouble’. | |
| Relaxation | Q40 ‘Relaxation… I have devised my own breathing and visualisation which I try to do daily’. |
| Q41 ‘Listen to relaxation CD every day. Sleeping better at nights’. | |
| Q42 ‘More relaxed, eating a better diet, a new lease of life to look forward to’. | |
| Q43 ‘I have slowed down the mad pace in which I used to do everything and am more laid back and relaxed’. | |
| Increased self-efficacy | Q44 ‘I do short walks alone: I used to wait to arrange with friends. I now do some exercises at home’. |
| Q45 ‘Explanation about the condition and the psychological approaches to the problem and the reassurances’. | |
| Q46 ‘Less likely to worry about my condition’. | |
| Q47 ‘I am more prepared to push myself without expecting angina pain’. | |
| Q48 ‘My confidence has improved and I am getting stronger each day’. | |
| Validation | Q49 ‘Completing the programme has re-affirmed the things I already did as being correct’. |
| Mental health | Q50 ‘Turning negative thoughts to positive ones!’ |
| Q51 ‘Low spirits after a heart procedure (depression)’. | |
| Q52 ‘Mostly about operation and recovery and help for couples to cope with mood swings’. | |
| Q53 ‘Angina, stress and anxiety’. | |
| Self-perception | Q54 ‘I have become more tolerant of myself’. |
| Q55 ‘I feel more hopeful than I did prior to completing the programme. Each day I feel I am making progress with small tasks around the house, and this gives me a feeling of worth once again’. | |
| Q56 ‘I found it hard to accept I had a heart attack. Previous to it I had been feeling good. The programme has helped me to realise I had a heart problem’. | |
| Q57 ‘I now accept that I have to change my lifestyle to my condition’. | |
| 3. Education | |
| Understanding | Q58 ‘Learning to understand my health issues and dealing with them’. |
| Q59 ‘What the risk factors are and how to reduce them to prevent other heart attacks’. | |
| Q60 ‘Knowing the truth. So simple but so useful’. | |
| Q61 ‘Understanding the process of recovery’. | |
| Q62 ‘Explaining what uses tablets are for and explaining about stents’. | |
| Q63 ‘Recovery section, exercises section and different ways to deal with emotions after bypass’. | |
| Awareness | Q64 ‘Made me fully aware of the seriousness of my heart attack’. |
| Q65 ‘I am more aware of the workings of the heart, what food is good for me, what is bad’. | |
| Q66 ‘More aware of condition and the treatment’. | |
| 4. Support | |
| Q67 ‘Back to normal. Reassured about recovery process’. | |
| Q68 ‘If I forget I can look it up in your Heart Manual. Plus other advice’. | |
| Q69 ‘Reading the manual knowing it is there to check any time I feel insecure’. | |
| Q70 ‘The stories about how other people feel because one gets the same feelings and I find that the stories have helped me to cope better’. | |
| 5. Medical risk management | |
| Q71 ‘Hospital tests and treatments.’ | |
| Q72 ‘At 82 it is difficult to change lifestyle - but the stent has improved me 100%. Still have some aches and pains - a result of old age?!’ | |
| Q73 ‘I had never taken a pill. I have now’. | |
| Q74 ‘Awareness and control of behaviour. Difficulty in managing medicine regime’. | |
| 6. Vocational support | |
| Q75 ‘Take breaks when go back to work’. | |
| Q76 ‘Reduced time at work’. | |
| Q77 ‘It is just over a year since my heart attack. I am back to normal doing a full time job’. | |
| Q78 ‘I have handed in my notice at work’. | |
| 7. Long-term maintenance | |
| Normality | Q79 ‘Early days but trying to get back normal as what I used to do but it is taking time’. |
| Q80 ‘Not a lot other than getting back to life as it was up to a few weeks before the heart attack but some changes in diet’. | |
| Halted or interrupted progress | Q81 ‘Contracting severe sciatica approx 6 weeks after heart attack has really been debilitating regarding loss of mobility & pain’. |
| Q82 ‘The programme brought me along very nicely but unfortunately introducing me to Beta-Blockers stopped me in my tracks’. | |
| No change | Q83 ‘Nothing doing what I did before’. |
| Q84 ‘My life is much the same as before - I am 91 so do what I can when I can. I have no home help. As I am 92 this year I think I must have been doing something right! I have enjoyed good health until this happened. I don’t think a lot of the manual applied to me!’ | |
| 8. Access to a comprehensive home-based cardiac rehabilitation programme | |
| Q85 ‘Difficult to specify as book is useful in every section’. | |
| Q86 ‘The whole manual has been most helpful to me’. | |
| Q87 ‘I found all information helpful and informative. It’s really interesting and helped me understand what has happened and what was to come over the weeks’. | |
| Q88 ‘All the sections were useful as one built up another as you progressed through’. | |
| Q89 ‘It was all interesting and informative and good to be able to keep referring as I have a bad memory!’ | |
| Q90 ‘All the sections have added to achieving a steady, effective and sustained recovery’. | |
| 9. The Heart Manual programme | |
| Q91 ‘The weekly programme (week by week)’. | |
| Q92 ‘Having a daily record to reflect back on in particular when I had the odd set back, it made a positive impact’. | |
| Q93 ‘The emphasis on daily action/attention helped me focus on my situation and concentrate on what I needed to do’. | |
| Q94 ‘Routine’. | |
| Q95 ‘The daily exercise records. I have found that using them pushes one into making more effort’. | |