| Literature DB >> 34945763 |
Maria do Céu Marques1,2, Rute Pires1,3, Miguel Perdigão1,3, Luis Sousa1,2, César Fonseca1,2, Lara Guedes Pinho1,2, Manuel Lopes1,2.
Abstract
Patient-centered care is essential in high-quality health care, as it leads to beneficial outcomes for patients. The objective of this review is to systematize indicators for the care of patients with cardiometabolic diseases based on patient-centered care, extending from the stages of diagnostic evaluation and care planning to intervention. An integrative literature review was conducted by searching seven scientific databases, and a narrative analysis was performed. A total of 15 articles were included, and indicators related to diagnosis and care planning/intervention were extracted. In the planning of care centered on the person with cardiometabolic diseases, the individuality, dynamics of the processes, flexibility and the participation of all stakeholders should be taken into account. The needs of the person must be addressed through the identification of problems; establishment of individual goals; shared decision making; information and education; systematic feedback; case management; meeting the patient's preferences and satisfaction with care; engagement of the family; and therapeutic management. The indicators for intervention planning extracted were behavioral interventions, therapeutic management programs, lifestyle promotion, shared decision making, education patient and information, interventions with the use of technology, promotion of self-management, program using technology, therapeutic relationship, therapeutic adherence programs and specialized intervention.Entities:
Keywords: cardiometabolic disease; patient care planning; patient-centered care
Year: 2021 PMID: 34945763 PMCID: PMC8703261 DOI: 10.3390/jpm11121289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart. From: Page MJ, McKenzie JE, Bossuyt PM, Boutron I, Hoffmann TC, Mulrow CD et al. The PRISMA 2020 statement: an updated guideline for reporting systematic reviews. Melbourne, Australia. BMJ 2021, 372, n71. doi: 10.1136/bmj.n71 [9].
Study results.
| Aim/Hypothesis | Author | Year | Study Type | Intervention/Strategy | Results/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A behavioral intervention to increase patient activation, patient-centered care processes, and | Iturralde, Sterling, Uratsu, Mishra, Ross and Grant [ | 2019 | Randomized controlled trial | CREATE Wellness was an intervention designed to develop knowledge and skills in patients systematically unable to achieve the therapeutic goals of management and control of CVD risk factors. This consisted of three group-based patient activation sessions two weeks apart that included between-session contacts with the interventionist (i.e., text message, voice or video call) to reinforce self-management behaviors and skills. | There were reports of improvements in the patient-centered care process. The intervention group was more frequently involved with the health system using online tools. |
| To evaluate the effect of patient centred bedside rounds (PCBRs) on measures of patient-centred care | O’Leary, Killarney, Hansen, Jones, Malladi, Marks and Shah [ | 2016 | Cluster randomized controlled trial | Semi-structured interviews with input from patients, family members and frontline professionals were conducted at Northwestern Memorial Hospital (NMH) in units equipped with cardiac telemetry monitoring and with implemented daily interprofessional bedside rounds. | After discharge, there was no difference in patients’ perceptions of whether nurses and doctors worked as a team or whether the staff included them in treatment decisions. |
| To describe a patient-centered medication therapy management | Lenz and Monaghan [ | 2011 | Quasi -experimental | A program was implemented to reduce cardiovascular risk based on the intervention of a community pharmacy located in Omaha, NE. The program used various tools (i.e., lifestyle adherence diary, nutrition diary, pedometer, home blood pressure monitor, monthly news bulletin, monthly support group meeting, blog site, and educational materials) to improve patient-centered care and patient outcomes. | Most participants, regardless of hypertension diagnosis, had improvements in blood pressure values, met cholesterol guidelines, lowered blood glucose levels, met exercise guidelines (>150 min/week), increased their combined intake of fresh fruits and vegetables, and lost weight. |
| The authors propose a proof-of-concept machine-learning expert system that learned knowledge of lifestyle and the associated 10-year cardiovascular disease (CVD) risks from individual-level data (i.e., Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, ARIC). | Chi, Street, Robinson and Crawford [ | 2012 | Qualitative | Construction of an expert system that learned knowledge of lifestyle and associated CDV risks from the data from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study using k-NN prediction models. | The results showed that the optimal individualized, patient-centered lifestyle consistently reduced the 10-year CVD risk. |
| To explore how clinicians deliver patient-centred care for women (PCCW), challenges they face, and the strategies they suggest are needed to support PCCW. | Filler, Dunn, Grace, Straus, Stewart and Gagliardi [ | 2020 | Qualitative | Semi-structured interviews with clinicians from the province of Ontario, Canada, whose script consisted of three questions: (1) How do you tailor patient-centered care for women? (2) What factors challenge patient-centered care for women? (3) What strategies or interventions would help you deliver or achieve patient-centered care for women? | Clinicians emphasized that women face unique challenges in seeking health care and communicating about health care issues that warrant tailoring of PCC. Approaches used by clinicians to adapt PCC to women were: fostering a healing relationship, exchanging information, addressing emotions/concerns, managing uncertainty, decision making, and allowing self-management. |
| To apply the ACC/AHA guidelines in a patient centered and practical perspective, 3 cases illustrate the evidence-based approach espoused by the new guidelines, with 1 important modification | Montori, Brito and Ting [ | 2014 | 2 Cases/Opinion | In 2013, the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) published new guidelines for assessing CVD | Clinicians who consider applying the guidelines should determine the 10-year CVD risk for each patient and engage the patient in shared decision making using evidence-based approaches. The new ACC/AHA guidelines therefore create an opportunity to advance patient-centered care and shared decision making. Rather than routinely prescribing statins to the millions of adults who have a 10-year CVD risk of at least 7.5%, the realization of this opportunity requires clinicians to engage in deliberation with individual patients about the potential benefits, harms, and burdens of statin use. |
| To examine patient and | Dhukaram, Baber and De Stefanis [ | 2012 | Focus group studies | Focus group interviews and its results were used to understand patients’ concerns and perceptions toward pervasive healthcare systems and to explore potential barriers to the acceptance of the BraveHealth system, with participants recruited in Italy and England. After the presentation of the components of the system, the patients were asked to answer questions about the usability of biomedical devices, wearable units, touch screen technologies and virtual communities. | ITALY |
| The Canadian Journal of Cardiology | Kim and Rich [ | 2016 | 2 Cases/Opinion | Case Study | A disease management program led by a heart failure nurse specialist and involving close telephone follow-up and home visits may reduce heart failure and all-cause admissions and mortality. |
| To increase health care professionals’ intention and encouraging | Sassen, Kok, Schepers and Vanhees [ | 2014 | Experimental | The effectiveness of a Web-based intervention in the clinical practice of patient-centered care was tested. The intervention was developed to optimize processes of shared decision making and self-management, following the protocol for intervention mapping. The objective was to increase health care professionals’ intention and behavior toward encouraging patient self-management. Participants were health care professionals with at least a bachelor’s degree in nursing or physiotherapy and who had regular consultations with patients with cardiovascular risk factors. All participants were offered a three-hour training session. | Professionals in the intervention group stated that 59% of their consultation time was devoted to health education. The module to improve professionals’ behavior to optimize processes of shared decision making and self-management was used by 45% of the professionals; |
| To evaluated whether participating patients had reduced risks of cardiovascular events, including coronary heart disease, stroke, and all-cause mortality. | Kornelius, Chiou, Yang, Lu, Peng and Huang [ | 2015 | Retrospective cohort study | The Diabetes Shared Care Program (DSCP), an integrated diabetes care model designed to increase the quality of diabetes care in Taiwan, was analyzed. Data were obtained from the National Health Insurance Research Database of Taiwan. DSCP participants received integrated care from a physician, diabetes educator, and dietitian. | Compared to nonparticipants, DSCP participants had significantly lower risks of overall CVD events. |
| To gain insight into what motivates older people living in the community to partake in a cardiovascular prevention programme, and reasons for subsequent continuation or withdrawal. | Ligthart, Eerenbeemt, Pols, Van Bussel, Richard and Van Charante [ | 2015 | Qualitative | The sample consisted of PreDIVA participants (all people aged 70–78 years were invited to participate through a letter from their general practitioner). Semi-structured interviews were conducted in six different healthcare centers. | Almost all participants emphasized the importance of the relationship with the practice nurse. |
| To explored the potential of patient-held alert cards to improve communication and continuity of care for heart failure patients moving between CHFSNs and hospital settings | McBride, Burey, Megahed, | 2014 | Qualitative | This study investigated the management of patients with heart failure (HF) by community heart failure specialist nurses (CHFSNs) by exploring the potential of patient-held alert cards to improve communication and continuity of care for patients with HF. The follow-up was 12 months. Alert cards were issued to 119 patients. The CHFSNs excluded patients with cognitive impairments or frailty. | The involvement of CHFSNs facilitated the continuity of care for HF patients at different levels and sectors of the healthcare system, in addition to improving safety and effectiveness. |
| The impact of a pharmacy-managed program for providing education | Warden, Freels, Furuno and Mackay [ | 2014 | Quasi-experimental | Intervention performed with adult patients admitted to Oregon Health and Science University’s cardiology unit with systolic HF exacerbation as their primary diagnosis. The HF-MED study evaluated the impact of pharmacist involvement in providing education and discharge instructions. Eighty-two percent of patients had an ejection fraction of <30%, 88% had functional class III or IV HF based on the New York Heart Association criteria, and 99% had functional class C or D HF based on the American College of Cardiology-American Heart Association criteria. | The HF-MED program was associated with a significant difference in favor of the pharmaceutical intervention group for both analyzed central measures of the Joint Commission, with adherence that exceeded their respective UHC reference parameters mentioned previously and 30-day readmissions for all causes. There was also a nonsignificant trend in reductions in 30-day readmissions related to HF. |
| To evaluate the impact of an intensive, evidence-based preventive cardiology programme on medical and lifestyle risk factors in patients at high risk of developing cardiovascular disease (CVD) | Gibson, Flaherty, Cormican, Jones, Kerins, Walsh, Costello, Windle, Connolly and Crowley [ | 2014 | Descriptive | The impact of an intensive evidence-based preventive cardiology program (Croi MyAction program-London) on medical and lifestyle risk factors in patients at high risk of developing CVD was evaluated. All participants were invited to bring a partner to the program, with an uptake rate of 61% among those who had a partner. | Among diabetic patients, glycemic control improved during the program. |
| To evaluate whether PCC is associated with less self-reported uncertainty in illness compared with usual care in patients hospitalized for worsening CHF. | Dudas, Olsson, Wolf, Swedberg, Taft, Schaufelberger and Ekman [ | 2013 | Experimental | The study evaluated whether person-centered care with less uncertainty in illness was comparable to usual care (UC) in patients hospitalized for worsening chronic heart failure (CHF). All patients with a prior diagnosis of CHF admitted to five | The results of the study suggest that compared to UC, PCC in patients hospitalized for worsening CHF seems to have a positive effect in reducing self-reported uncertainty in illness. |
Figure 2Patient-centered intervention model.