Cargando…

The dynamics of self-care in the course of heart failure management: data from the IN TOUCH study

INTRODUCTION: Self-care is an important patient-reported outcome (PRO) for heart failure (HF) patients, which might be affected by disease management and/or telemonitoring (TM). The number of studies reporting the influence of TM on self-care is limited. AIMS: This study aimed: to assess whether TM,...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lycholip, Edita, Thon Aamodt, Ina, Lie, Irene, Šimbelytė, Toma, Puronaitė, Roma, Hillege, Hans, de Vries, Arjen, Kraai, Imke, Stromberg, Anna, Jaarsma, Tiny, Čelutkienė, Jelena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6027682/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29983549
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S162219
_version_ 1783336652495650816
author Lycholip, Edita
Thon Aamodt, Ina
Lie, Irene
Šimbelytė, Toma
Puronaitė, Roma
Hillege, Hans
de Vries, Arjen
Kraai, Imke
Stromberg, Anna
Jaarsma, Tiny
Čelutkienė, Jelena
author_facet Lycholip, Edita
Thon Aamodt, Ina
Lie, Irene
Šimbelytė, Toma
Puronaitė, Roma
Hillege, Hans
de Vries, Arjen
Kraai, Imke
Stromberg, Anna
Jaarsma, Tiny
Čelutkienė, Jelena
author_sort Lycholip, Edita
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Self-care is an important patient-reported outcome (PRO) for heart failure (HF) patients, which might be affected by disease management and/or telemonitoring (TM). The number of studies reporting the influence of TM on self-care is limited. AIMS: This study aimed: to assess whether TM, in addition to information-and-communication-technology (ICT)-guided disease management system (ICT-guided DMS), affects self-care behavior; to evaluate the dynamics of self-care during the study; to investigate factors contributing to self-care changes; and to identify a patient profile that predisposes the patient to improvement in self-care. METHODS: In the INnovative ICT-guided-DMS combined with Telemonitoring in OUtpatient clinics for Chronic HF patients (IN TOUCH) study, 177 patients were randomized to either ICT-guided DMS or TM+ICT-guided DMS, with a follow-up of 9 months. The current analysis included 118 participants (mean age: 69±11.5 years; 70% male) who filled the following PRO instruments: the nine-item European Heart Failure Self-care Behaviour scale (EHFScBs), Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale (HADs), and Minnesota Living with HF Questionnaire (MLHFQ). RESULTS: The baseline level of self-care was better in the TM+ICT-guided-DMS group (n=58) compared to ICT-guided-DMS group (n=60, p=0.023). Self-care behavior improved in the ICT-guided-DMS group (p<0.01) but not in the TM+ICT-guided-DMS group. Factors associated with self-care worsening were as follows: higher physical subscale of MLHFQ (per 10 points, p<0.05), lower left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (per 5%, p<0.05), lower New York Heart Association (NYHA) class (class III vs class II, p<0.05). The subgroups of patients who had an initial EHFScBs total score >28, or from 17 to 28 with concomitant HADs depression subscale (HADs_D) score ≤8, demonstrated the greatest potential to improve self-care during the study. CONCLUSION: TM did not have an advantage on self-care improvement. Poor physical aspect of quality of life, lower LVEF, and lower NYHA class were associated with self-care worsening. The greatest self-care improvement may be achieved in those patients who have low or medium initial self-care level in the absence of depression.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6027682
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Dove Medical Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-60276822018-07-06 The dynamics of self-care in the course of heart failure management: data from the IN TOUCH study Lycholip, Edita Thon Aamodt, Ina Lie, Irene Šimbelytė, Toma Puronaitė, Roma Hillege, Hans de Vries, Arjen Kraai, Imke Stromberg, Anna Jaarsma, Tiny Čelutkienė, Jelena Patient Prefer Adherence Original Research INTRODUCTION: Self-care is an important patient-reported outcome (PRO) for heart failure (HF) patients, which might be affected by disease management and/or telemonitoring (TM). The number of studies reporting the influence of TM on self-care is limited. AIMS: This study aimed: to assess whether TM, in addition to information-and-communication-technology (ICT)-guided disease management system (ICT-guided DMS), affects self-care behavior; to evaluate the dynamics of self-care during the study; to investigate factors contributing to self-care changes; and to identify a patient profile that predisposes the patient to improvement in self-care. METHODS: In the INnovative ICT-guided-DMS combined with Telemonitoring in OUtpatient clinics for Chronic HF patients (IN TOUCH) study, 177 patients were randomized to either ICT-guided DMS or TM+ICT-guided DMS, with a follow-up of 9 months. The current analysis included 118 participants (mean age: 69±11.5 years; 70% male) who filled the following PRO instruments: the nine-item European Heart Failure Self-care Behaviour scale (EHFScBs), Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale (HADs), and Minnesota Living with HF Questionnaire (MLHFQ). RESULTS: The baseline level of self-care was better in the TM+ICT-guided-DMS group (n=58) compared to ICT-guided-DMS group (n=60, p=0.023). Self-care behavior improved in the ICT-guided-DMS group (p<0.01) but not in the TM+ICT-guided-DMS group. Factors associated with self-care worsening were as follows: higher physical subscale of MLHFQ (per 10 points, p<0.05), lower left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (per 5%, p<0.05), lower New York Heart Association (NYHA) class (class III vs class II, p<0.05). The subgroups of patients who had an initial EHFScBs total score >28, or from 17 to 28 with concomitant HADs depression subscale (HADs_D) score ≤8, demonstrated the greatest potential to improve self-care during the study. CONCLUSION: TM did not have an advantage on self-care improvement. Poor physical aspect of quality of life, lower LVEF, and lower NYHA class were associated with self-care worsening. The greatest self-care improvement may be achieved in those patients who have low or medium initial self-care level in the absence of depression. Dove Medical Press 2018-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6027682/ /pubmed/29983549 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S162219 Text en © 2018 Lycholip et al. This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited The full terms of this license are available at https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/). By accessing the work you hereby accept the Terms. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Lycholip, Edita
Thon Aamodt, Ina
Lie, Irene
Šimbelytė, Toma
Puronaitė, Roma
Hillege, Hans
de Vries, Arjen
Kraai, Imke
Stromberg, Anna
Jaarsma, Tiny
Čelutkienė, Jelena
The dynamics of self-care in the course of heart failure management: data from the IN TOUCH study
title The dynamics of self-care in the course of heart failure management: data from the IN TOUCH study
title_full The dynamics of self-care in the course of heart failure management: data from the IN TOUCH study
title_fullStr The dynamics of self-care in the course of heart failure management: data from the IN TOUCH study
title_full_unstemmed The dynamics of self-care in the course of heart failure management: data from the IN TOUCH study
title_short The dynamics of self-care in the course of heart failure management: data from the IN TOUCH study
title_sort dynamics of self-care in the course of heart failure management: data from the in touch study
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6027682/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29983549
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S162219
work_keys_str_mv AT lycholipedita thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT thonaamodtina thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT lieirene thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT simbelytetoma thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT puronaiteroma thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT hillegehans thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT devriesarjen thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT kraaiimke thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT stromberganna thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT jaarsmatiny thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT celutkienejelena thedynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT lycholipedita dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT thonaamodtina dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT lieirene dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT simbelytetoma dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT puronaiteroma dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT hillegehans dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT devriesarjen dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT kraaiimke dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT stromberganna dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT jaarsmatiny dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy
AT celutkienejelena dynamicsofselfcareinthecourseofheartfailuremanagementdatafromtheintouchstudy