24 research outputs found
Effectiveness of an Educational Program to Enhance Self-care Skills After Acute Coronary Syndrome: A Quasi-Experimental Study
Abstract. Background: The aim of this study is to determine the effectiveness
of an educational program to enhance self-care skills in patients after an acute
coronary syndrome
Methods: A quasi-experimental pretest-posttest design was used in the study.
A rehabilitation nurse provided an educational program (PEpSCA-CARE) to the
intervention group (n = 32), and the control group (n = 35) received the conventional
nursing pre-discharge care. The data was collected using the Therapeutic
Self-Care Scale (TSCS) in four dimensions: medications, symptoms,
activities of daily living and health status management, applied before hospital
discharge and one month after hospital discharge to both groups. Patients were
recruited from an intensive cardiovascular care unit during 2016.
Results: The results showed statistically significant differences between both
groups (p < 0.001). The intervention group tended to improve their self-care
skills while the control group had opposite trends, self-care skills decreased.
Conclusions: According to the findings of the study, a systematized and
structured educational program, is effective in developing self-care skills in
patients after an acute coronary syndrome
Outcome measures in a combined exercise rehabilitation programme for adults with COPD and chronic heart failure : A preliminary stakeholder consensus event
Combined exercise rehabilitation for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and chronic heart failure (CHF) is potentially attractive. Uncertainty remains as to the baseline profiling assessments and outcome measures that should be collected within a programme. Current evidence surrounding outcome measures in cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation were presented by experts at a stakeholder consensus event and all stakeholders (n = 18) were asked to (1) rank in order of importance a list of categories, (2) prioritise outcome measures and (3) prioritise baseline patient evaluation measures that should be assessed in a combined COPD and CHF rehabilitation programme. The tasks were completed anonymously and related to clinical rehabilitation programmes and associated research. Health-related quality of life, exercise capacity and symptom evaluation were voted as the most important categories to assess for clinical purposes (median rank: 1, 2 and 3 accordingly) and research purposes (median rank; 1, 3 and 4.5 accordingly) within combined exercise rehabilitation. All stakeholders agreed that profiling symptoms at baseline were 'moderately', 'very' or 'extremely' important to assess for clinical and research purposes in combined rehabilitation. Profiling of frailty was ranked of the same importance for clinical purposes in combined rehabilitation. Stakeholders identified a suite of multidisciplinary measures that may be important to assess in a combined COPD and CHF exercise rehabilitation programme