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A Theory-Based, Technology-Assisted Intervention in a Hybrid Cardiac Rehabilitation Program for Patients with Coronary Heart Disease: A Feasibility Study

Asian Nursing Research 2023³â 17±Ç 3È£ p.180 ~ 190
KMID : 1022320230170030180
 ( Mei Sin Chong ) - 

 ( Janet Wing Hung Sit ) - 
 ( Kai Chow Choi ) - 
 ( Anwar Suhaimi ) - 
 ( Sek Ying Chair ) - 

Abstract

Purpose To assess the feasibility of a technology-assisted intervention in a hybrid cardiac rehabilitation program among patients with coronary heart disease.

Methods This study was a two-arm parallel randomized controlled trial. Twenty-eight patients with coronary heart disease were randomly assigned to either the intervention group, receiving a 12-week technology-assisted intervention (n = 14), or the control group (n = 14), receiving usual care. Guided by the Health Belief Model, the intervention group received three center-based, supervised exercise training sessions, a fitness watch that served as a cue to action, six educational videos, and a weekly video call. The Self-efficacy for Exercise, exercise capacity, and Health Promoting Lifestyle Profile II were assessed at baseline and immediately post-intervention (12-weeks).

Results Among the 28 patients who participated in this study, 85.7% completed the program, with a relatively low attrition rate (14.3%). The number of exercise training sessions accomplished by the participants in the intervention group was 51.27 ¡¾ 19.41 out of 60 sessions (85.5%) compared to 36.46 ¡¾ 23.05 (60.8%) in the control group. No cardiac adverse events or hospitalizations were reported throughout the study. Participants in the intervention group showed greater improvement in health-promoting behaviors when compared with the control group at 12 weeks. Within-group effects demonstrated improvement in exercise self-efficacy and exercise capacity among participants in the intervention group. A participant satisfaction survey conducted immediately post-intervention revealed that participants were ¡°very satisfied¡± (23.1%) and ¡°satisfied¡± (76.9%) with the technology-assisted intervention.

Conclusions The findings demonstrated that technology-assisted intervention in a hybrid cardiac rehabilitation program was feasible and suggested to be beneficial in improving exercise self-efficacy, exercise capacity, and health promoting behavior among patients with coronary heart disease. A full-scale study is needed to determine its effectiveness in the long term.
Trial and protocol registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04862351.
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04862351.
KeyWords

technology, hybrid, cardiac rehabilitation, coronary heart disease
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