Patterns of self-care and clinical events in a cohort of adults with heart failure: 1 year follow-up
Journal article
Lee, C., Bidwell, Julie T., Paturzo, Marco, Alvaro, Rosaria, Cocchieri, Antonello, Jaarsma, Tiny, Stromberg, Anna, Riegel, Barbara and Vellone, Ercole. (2018). Patterns of self-care and clinical events in a cohort of adults with heart failure: 1 year follow-up. Heart & Lung: the journal of acute and critical care. 47(1), pp. 40 - 46. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrtlng.2017.09.004
Authors | Lee, C., Bidwell, Julie T., Paturzo, Marco, Alvaro, Rosaria, Cocchieri, Antonello, Jaarsma, Tiny, Stromberg, Anna, Riegel, Barbara and Vellone, Ercole |
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Abstract | Background: Heart failure (HF) self-care is important in reducing clinical events (all-cause mortality, emergency room visits and hospitalizations). HF self-care behaviors are multidimensional and include maintenance (i.e. daily adherence behaviors), management (i.e. symptom response behaviors) and consulting behaviors (i.e. contacting a provider when appropriate). Across these dimensions, patterns of successful patient engagement in self-care have been observed (e.g. successful in one dimension but not in others), but no previous studies have linked patterns of HF selfcare to clinical events. Objectives: To identify patterns of self-care behaviors in HF patients and their association with clinical events. Methods: This was a prospective, non-experimental, cohort study. Community-dwelling HF patients (n ¼ 459) were enrolled across Italy, and clinical events were collected one year after enrollment. We measured dimensions of self-care behavior with the Self-Care of HF Index (maintenance, management, and confidence) and the European HF Self-care Behavior Scale (consulting behaviors). We used latent class mixture modeling to identify patterns of HF self-care across dimensions, and Cox proportional hazards modeling to quantify event-free survival over 12 months of follow-up. Results: Patients (mean age 71.8 12.1 years) were mostly males (54.9%). Three patterns of self-care behavior were identified; we labeled each by their most prominent dimensional characteristic: poor symptom response, good symptom response, and maintenance-focused behaviors. Patients with good symptom response behaviors had fewer clinical events compared with those who had poor symptom response behaviors (adjusted hazard ratio ¼ 0.66 [0.46e0.96], p ¼ 0.03). Patients with poor symptom response behaviors had the most frequent clinical events. Patients with poor symptom response and those with maintenance-focused behaviors had a similar frequency of clinical events. Conclusions: Self-care is significantly associated with clinical events. Routine assessment, mitigation of barriers, and interventions targeting self-care are needed to reduce clinical events in HF patients |
Year | 2018 |
Journal | Heart & Lung: the journal of acute and critical care |
Journal citation | 47 (1), pp. 40 - 46 |
Publisher | Mosby Inc. |
ISSN | 0147-9563 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrtlng.2017.09.004 |
Scopus EID | 2-s2.0-85031685309 |
Page range | 40 - 46 |
Research Group | Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research |
Publisher's version | File Access Level Controlled |
Place of publication | United States |
Editors | N. Redeker |
https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/8831y/patterns-of-self-care-and-clinical-events-in-a-cohort-of-adults-with-heart-failure-1-year-follow-up
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