| Literature DB >> 34063747 |
Sabina Alexandra Cojocariu1, Alexandra Maștaleru1,2, Radu Andy Sascău1,3, Cristian Stătescu1,3, Florin Mitu1,2, Elena Cojocaru4,5, Laura Mihaela Trandafir5,6, Maria-Magdalena Leon-Constantin1,2.
Abstract
(1) Background: Cardiac rehabilitation is a multidisciplinary program that includes psychoeducational support in addition to physical exercise. Psychoeducational intervention is a component that has had accelerated interest and development in recent decades. The aim was to analyze the current evidence on the effectiveness of psychoeducational interventions for patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). (2)Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; depression; education; illness perception; myocardial infarction; physical behavior; psychotherapy; quality of life
Year: 2021 PMID: 34063747 PMCID: PMC8223782 DOI: 10.3390/jpm11060440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1Flow diagram showing selection process.
General characteristics of studies included in present systematic review.
| Authors and Year of Publication | Enrollment Place | No. of Patients | Mean Age | Education | Timing and Setting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chiavarino et al., 2016 [ | Italy (1) | 118 | 56.5 (8.70) | 10.3 ± 4.0 years | 8 months |
| Davidson et al., 2010 [ | USA (5) | 157 | 61.2 (10.6) | 13.1 ± 3.8 years | 15 months |
| Fernandes et al., 2017, 2018 | Portugal (1) | 121 | 61.77 (12.11) versus 66.11 (12.61) | <4 years: 25 | 2 months |
| Huffman et al., 2019 [ | USA (1) | 47 | 60.80 (10.7) | Not specified | 6 months |
| Nasiri et al., | Iran (1) | 64 | 52.7 (10.94) | Elementary: 12 | 1 month |
| Norlund et al., 2018 [ | Sweden (25) | 239 | 58.4 (9.0) versus 60.8 (7.8) | Elementary: 48 | 3.5 months |
| O’Brien et al., 2014 [ | Dublin (5) | 1136 | 62.65 (12.3) | Little formal/primary: 404 | 12 months |
| O’Neil et al., | Australia (6) | 121 | 61.0 (10.2) versus 58.9 (10.7) | High School: 67 | 12 months |
| Oranta et al., 2010–1012 [ | Finland (1) | 103 | < 60 years: 45 | Professional Education: 41 | 18 months |
| Pristipino et al., 2019 [ | Italy (1) | 45 | 55 (9) versus | Not specified | 5 years |
| Roncella et al., 2013 [ | 12 months | ||||
| Sunamura et al., 2017 [ | Netherlands (10) | 615 | 57.5 (9.2) versus 57.4 (9.3) | Low = 19 | 18 months |
| Ter Hoeve et al., 2018 [ | 324 | 58.8 (9) versus 59.1 (9) | Low = 16 |
The intervention details for each study (ordered by study ID).
| RCT | Type | Description | Delivered by | Dose | Comparator |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minutes (No. of Sessions) | |||||
| Chiavarino et al. [ | Mental fitness | The sessions were conducted in small groups and lasted 90 min. The intervention was focused on emotions and thoughts. The protocol was based on cognitive theory, being designed for patients with ACS and adapted to the individual power of control of perceptions. The program contained cognitive strategies so that patients were trained to understand and confront the event they were experiencing. | Two specifically trained clinical psychologists | 360 | Usual care |
| Davidson et al. [ | Problem-solving therapy | The meetings were weekly, in person, or on the phone, each visit lasting 30–45 min. The intervention focused on solving the problem. The protocol was based on increasing the patients’ skills. Participants were taught to assess and expose each psychosocial problem. Pleasant regular activities tailored to each patient were encouraged. | Clinical nurse specialist, psychologist, social worker, and/or psychiatrist | 120–160 | Usual care |
| Fernandes et al. [ | Brief psychological intervention in phase I of cardiac rehabilitation | The program was made up of three sessions: education on ACS and cardiac rehabilitation, promotion of psychosocial adjustment in post-ACS rehabilitation (cognitive behavioral strategies for reducing stress and anxiety, education for disease awareness and confidence, promoting adaptive coping, self-monitoring, planning, and family involvement in coping after discharge) and follow-up after hospital discharge. | Session 1: psychologist, cardiologist | 200 | Usual care |
| Huffman et al. [ | Positive psychology exercises combined with motivational interviewing | The sessions were weekly, delivered by phone, with a duration of 30–45 min each, for a period of 12 weeks. The intervention was composed of two components: a positive psychology component (focused on completing activities based on positive psychology and their application in everyday life) and a motivational interviewing component (used for goal setting to specifically promote physical activity). | Study interventionist | 360–540 | Positive psychology exercises alone |
| Nasiri et al. [ | Mindfulness training program | The meetings were weekly and lasted 2 h each. The intervention focused on the stress perceived after the acute coronary event and on understanding the disease. | NS | 1080 | Usual care |
| Norlund et al. [ | Internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy | The intervention included 10 modules with different themes adapted to patients with MI: managing worry, fear, and avoidance, behavioral activation, problem solving, communication skills, applied relaxation training, managing negative thoughts, coping with insomnia, values in life, and relapse prevention. Each module consisted of 2–4 treatment steps. Each treatment stage provided psychoeducation in the form of an electronic text (PDF) along with 1–2 homework assignments. Patients also benefited from additional material and videos that exemplified coping strategies. In addition, patients had access to a discussion board where they could communicate with other patients. | Licensed psychologists | NM | Treatment as usual |
| O’Brien et al. [ | Individualized education session delivered using motivational interviewing techniques | The meetings were monthly, each visit lasting 40 min. The first session was delivered within 2–4 days of hospital admission at the bedside or in a room off the ward. The intervention consisted of face-to-face education sessions, tailored to the patient’s needs and impact of the disease on the patient’s cognition and emotions. Through motivational training, patients were encouraged to act promptly and appropriately to seek medical attention if required. | NS | 80–160 | Usual care |
| O’Neil et al. [ | Telephone-based psychotherapy | The sessions took place over the phone for 6 months, with an average duration of 48.4 min per session. Intervention sessions were delivered most intensively over the first 3 months. The goal of the program was depression management and cardiovascular risk reduction. The components of the psychological intervention were: motivational interviewing, goal setting, behavioral activation, and cognitive restructuring. | Master’s level qualified psychologists | 384 | Usual medical care |
| Oranta et al. [ | Interpersonal counseling | The content of the intervention was modified for MI patients to take from 1 to 6 sessions (mean 4.6, SD 1.24, mode 5), consisting of:
starting phase (sessions 1–2): linking the depressive symptoms to the patient’s interpersonal situation and choosing the problem area; encouragement phase (sessions 3–4): working in the problem area, encouragement, processing life changes, finding resources and coping strategies; ending phase (sessions 5–6): encouragement to seek help, encouraging and consolidating the gains, developing ways of identifying and countering depressive symptoms in the future. | Psychiatric nurse trained for one day in the practice of interpersonal counseling | 130 | Standard care after MI |
| Pristipino et al. [ | Short-term psychotherapy | Individual psychotherapy: 3 to 10 sessions of 1 h with each including personal history elaboration, body language insights, relaxation techniques, and dream analysis. | Single psychotherapist | 540–960 | Usual care |
| Sunamura et al., 2017 [ | Group counseling sessions delivered using motivational interviewing technique | The intervention was structured in 3 group counseling sessions, face to face, regarding the physical activity performed. Each session lasted 75 min. In addition, patients participated in 2 more face-to-face group sessions at 3 and 9 months. Each of these sessions consisted of behavioral counseling on heart-healthy lifestyle lasting 1 h per session. | Physiotherapist trained in motivational interviewing | 345 | Standard cardiac rehabilitation |
RCT: randomized controlled trial, ACS: acute coronary syndrome, MI: myocardial infarction, NM: not measurable: NS: not specified.
Figure 2Benefits of psychoeducation rehabilitation focused on acute coronary syndrome.
Figure 3The benefits of psychoeducational interventions specific to the type of cardiac rehabilitation programs and their total dose expressed in number of sessions (S) and minutes (`). CR = cardiac rehabilitation, PP = positive psychology, NCEs = non-cardiovascular events.