Kathleen Lalande, Karen Bouchard, Thais Coutinho, Sharon Mulvagh, Christine Pacheco, Shuangbo Liu, Jacqueline Saw, Derek So, Jennifer L Reed, Alexandra Chiarelli, Helen Robert, Nadia Lappa, George Wells, Heather Tulloch
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) disproportionately affects females who are often younger in age. Age-based comparisons of the post-SCAD experience are required to adequately inform rehabilitation programming that is sensitive to patient life circumstances and needs. This multi-site qualitative study investigated the experiences of SCAD in females analyzed according to their age (<50 and ≥50 years).
Methods: Females who had experienced a SCAD event were recruited from 5 large tertiary care hospitals. Participants completed sociodemographic and medical questionnaires and took part in a semi-structured interview. Transcribed data were subject to the framework method using deductive coding. Constructed codes and overarching themes were then compared in the <50 and ≥50-year patient groups. Themes that highlighted the central differences between demographic groups were then constructed inductively.
Results: Overall, females with SCAD (n = 77; mean age = 52.9 ± 10.8 years; range = 29-77) reported struggling with a lack of information from their health care team with regards to the diagnosis, management, and long-term prognosis of SCAD. Younger patient (n = 32; mean age = 40.2 ± 6.7 years) transcripts evidenced more prominent themes of uncertainty, dissatisfaction with cardiac rehabilitation programming, difficulty adjusting to lifestyle and vocational changes, and family-related distress in comparison to those over 50 (n = 45; mean age = 57.8 ± 6.9 years).
Conclusions: Females with SCAD who are <50 years old appear to experience their recovery from SCAD differently than those who are older in age. These differences suggest that tailored approaches may be required in cardiovascular rehabilitation programming for younger SCAD patients.
期刊介绍:
JCRP was the first, and remains the only, professional journal dedicated to improving multidisciplinary clinical practice and expanding research evidence specific to both cardiovascular and pulmonary rehabilitation. This includes exercise testing and prescription, behavioral medicine, and cardiopulmonary risk factor management. In 2007, JCRP expanded its scope to include primary prevention of cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases. JCRP publishes scientific and clinical peer-reviewed Original Investigations, Reviews, and Brief or Case Reports focused on the causes, prevention, and treatment of individuals with cardiovascular or pulmonary diseases in both a print and online-only format. Editorial features include Editorials, Invited Commentaries, Literature Updates, and Clinically-relevant Topical Updates. JCRP is the official Journal of the American Association of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Rehabilitation and the Canadian Association of Cardiac Rehabilitation.