Julie Redfern, Robyn Gallagher, Andrew Maiorana, Dion Candelaria, Matthew Hollings, Sarah Gauci, Adrienne O’Neil, Georgia K. Chaseling, Ling Zhang, Emma E. Thomas, Gabriela L. M. Ghisi, Irene Gibson, Karice Hyun, Alexis Beatty, Tom Briffa, Rod S. Taylor, Ross Arena, Catriona Jennings, David Wood, Sherry L. Grace
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引用次数: 0
摘要
上个世纪,心血管疾病(CVD)的内外科治疗取得了重大发展。这些进步使更多的人从最初的疾病中存活下来,并缩短了住院时间;因此,越来越多的人需要持续和终身的心血管风险管理。心血管疾病患者的身体和精神影响是持续性的,面临着从个人到系统层面的广泛挑战。然而,冠心病患者出院后的护理仍然沿用已有 50 年历史的心脏康复模式,该模式侧重于亚急性阶段,且持续时间有限。本文旨在探讨支持幸存者与心血管疾病患者和睦相处而非使其 "康复 "的概念,并提出在重构二级预防以优化心血管健康时应考虑的因素。我们讨论了与支持幸存者获得最佳心血管健康并与心血管疾病和睦相处而不是使其 "康复 "这一概念相关的深层潜在考虑因素和挑战。我们提出了 "5 x P "的概念,以重新构建传统的心脏康复,使其超越 "康复 "的范畴,成为幸存者心血管健康的概念。其中包括个性化需求、流程、以患者为中心的护理、术语和伙伴关系。综合考虑系统和人群层面的挑战,最终将提高二级预防的参与度,并改善所有需要者的治疗效果。
Cardiac rehabilitation and secondary prevention of CVD: time to think about cardiovascular health rather than rehabilitation
During the past century, there have been major developments in the medical and surgical treatment of cardiovascular disease (CVD). These advancements have resulted in more people surviving initial events and having reduced length of stay in hospital; consequently, there is an increasing number of people in need of ongoing and lifelong cardiovascular risk management. The physical and emotional effects of living with CVD are ongoing with broad challenges ranging from the individual to system level. However, post-discharge care of people with coronary disease continues to follow a 50-year-old cardiac rehabilitation model which focuses on the sub-acute phase and is of a finite in duration. The aim of this paper is to consider the concept of supporting survivors to live well with CVD rather than ‘rehabilitating’ them and propose factors for consideration in reframing secondary prevention towards optimizing cardiovascular health. We discuss deeply-held potential considerations and challenges associated with the concept of supporting survivors achieve optimal cardiovascular health and live well with CVD rather than ‘rehabilitating’ them. We propose the concept of 5 x P’s for reframing traditional cardiac rehabilitation towards the concept of cardiovascular health for survivors beyond ‘rehabilitation’. These include the need for personalization, processes, patient-centered care, parlance, and partnership. Taken together, consideration of challenges at the systems and population level will ultimately improve engagement with secondary prevention as well as outcomes for all people who need it.