Patient Adherence to a Cardiovascular Rehabilitation Program: What Factors Are Involved?

Bustamante, María José; Valentino, Giovanna; Kramer, Verónica; Adasme, Marcela; Guidi, Dominique; Ibarra, Camila; Casasbellas, Cinthia; Orellana, Lorena; Fernández, Marcelo; Navarrete, Carlos; Acevedo, Monica

Keywords: Cardiac Rehabilitation, Adherence, Secondary Prevention

Abstract

Background: Phase II cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is a class IA indication in patients suffering a cardiovascular event (CV). Current guidelines suggest 36 exercise sessions over a period of 3 months. The main aim of this study was to analyze the rate of adherence to a cardiac rehabilitation program and the factors influencing it. Methods: This was a cross-sectional study in 421 secondary prevention patients, who assisted to a Phase-II-CR program between 2007 and 2014. At baseline and program end, patients completed a 6-minute walk test and the Short-Form 36 Health Survey (SF-36). Vital signs and anthropometric measurements were also collected. Adherence was quantified as the percentage of individuals who attended all 36 sessions of the program. Factors considered for affecting adherence included: cardiovascular risk factors (RFs), type of health insurance (public or private), aerobic capacity, and SF-36 score parameters. Results: Adherence to Phase-IICR was 33%, with no significant differences between men and women. The regression model fully adjusted for age, sex, RFs, type of health insurance and SF-36 score, showed that a SF-36 score <50 on physical health (odds ratio (OR): 11.47; 3.99 - 32.99; p < 0.0001) and smoking (OR: 4.41; 1.25 - 15.62; p = 0.02) were strong predictors for non-adherence. A trend for better adherence was observed in subjects older than 50 years compared to those aged between 17 and 50 years (37% versus 23%, respectively; p = 0.05). No significant differences were observed in adherence according to RFs clustering. Conclusions: Adherence to Phase-II-CR is low in our population. Patient-related factors, such as SF-36 score and smoking, were the best determinants of Phase-II-CR adherence. Health system-related factors did not influence adherence in this population. Prospective

Más información

Título de la Revista: International Journal of Clinical Medicine
Volumen: 6
Fecha de publicación: 2015
Página de inicio: 605
Página final: 614
Idioma: Ingles
URL: https://file.scirp.org/pdf/IJCM_2015090714582284.pdf