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A Nurse-led Approach to Improving Cardiac Lifestyle Modification in an Atrial Fibrillation Population

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a major public health problem and the most common cardiac arrhythmia encountered in clinical practice at this time. AF is associated with numerous symptoms such as palpitations, shortness of breath, and fatigue, which can significantly reduce health-related quality of lif...

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Autores principales: Hickey, Kathleen T., Wan, Elaine, Garan, Hasan, Biviano, Angelo B., Morrow, John P., Sciacca, Robert R., Reading, Meghan, Koleck, Theresa A., Caceres, Billy, Zhang, Yiyi, Goldenthal, Isaac, Riga, Teresa C., Masterson Creber, Ruth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MediaSphere Medical 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7252822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32494426
http://dx.doi.org/10.19102/icrm.2019.100902
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author Hickey, Kathleen T.
Wan, Elaine
Garan, Hasan
Biviano, Angelo B.
Morrow, John P.
Sciacca, Robert R.
Reading, Meghan
Koleck, Theresa A.
Caceres, Billy
Zhang, Yiyi
Goldenthal, Isaac
Riga, Teresa C.
Masterson Creber, Ruth
author_facet Hickey, Kathleen T.
Wan, Elaine
Garan, Hasan
Biviano, Angelo B.
Morrow, John P.
Sciacca, Robert R.
Reading, Meghan
Koleck, Theresa A.
Caceres, Billy
Zhang, Yiyi
Goldenthal, Isaac
Riga, Teresa C.
Masterson Creber, Ruth
author_sort Hickey, Kathleen T.
collection PubMed
description Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a major public health problem and the most common cardiac arrhythmia encountered in clinical practice at this time. AF is associated with numerous symptoms such as palpitations, shortness of breath, and fatigue, which can significantly reduce health-related quality of life and result in serious adverse cardiac outcomes. In light of this, the aim of the present pilot study was to test the feasibility of implementing a mobile health (mHealth) lifestyle intervention titled “Atrial Fibrillation and Cardiac Health: Targeting Improving Outcomes via a Nurse-Led Intervention (ACTION),” with the goal of improving cardiac health measures, AF symptom recognition, and self-management. As part of this study, participants self-identified cardiac health goals at enrollment. The nurse used web-based resources from the American Heart Association (Dallas, TX, USA), which included the Life’s Simple 7(®) My Life Check(®) assessment, to quantify current lifestyle behavior change needs. Furthermore, on the My AFib Experience™ website (American Heart Association, Dallas, TX, USA), the patient used a symptom tracker tool to capture the date, time, frequency, and type of AF symptoms, and these data were subsequently reviewed by the cardiac nurse. Throughout the six-month intervention period, the cardiac nurse used a motivational interviewing approach to support participants’ cardiac health goals. Ultimately, the ACTION intervention was tested in 53 individuals with AF (mean age: 59 ± 11 years; 76% male). Participants were predominantly overweight/obese (79%), had a history of hypertension (62%) or hyperlipidemia (61%), and reported being physically inactive/not preforming any type of regular exercise (52%). The majority (88%) of the participants had one or more Life’s Simple 7(®) measures that could be improved. Most of the participants (98%) liked having a dedicated nurse to work with them on a biweekly basis via the mHealth portal. The most commonly self-reported symptoms were palpitations, fatigue/exercise intolerance, and dyspnea. Seventy percent of the participants had an improvement in their weight and blood pressure as documented within the electronic health record as well as a corresponding improvement in their Life’s Simple 7(®) score at six months. On average, there was a three-pound (1.36-kg) decrease in weight and a 5-mmHg decrease in systolic blood pressure between baseline and at six months. In conclusion, this pilot work provides initial evidence regarding the feasibility of implementing the ACTION intervention and supports testing the ACTION intervention in a larger cohort of AF patients to inform existing AF guidelines and build an evidence base for reducing AF burden through lifestyle modification.
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spelling pubmed-72528222020-06-02 A Nurse-led Approach to Improving Cardiac Lifestyle Modification in an Atrial Fibrillation Population Hickey, Kathleen T. Wan, Elaine Garan, Hasan Biviano, Angelo B. Morrow, John P. Sciacca, Robert R. Reading, Meghan Koleck, Theresa A. Caceres, Billy Zhang, Yiyi Goldenthal, Isaac Riga, Teresa C. Masterson Creber, Ruth J Innov Card Rhythm Manag Original Research Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a major public health problem and the most common cardiac arrhythmia encountered in clinical practice at this time. AF is associated with numerous symptoms such as palpitations, shortness of breath, and fatigue, which can significantly reduce health-related quality of life and result in serious adverse cardiac outcomes. In light of this, the aim of the present pilot study was to test the feasibility of implementing a mobile health (mHealth) lifestyle intervention titled “Atrial Fibrillation and Cardiac Health: Targeting Improving Outcomes via a Nurse-Led Intervention (ACTION),” with the goal of improving cardiac health measures, AF symptom recognition, and self-management. As part of this study, participants self-identified cardiac health goals at enrollment. The nurse used web-based resources from the American Heart Association (Dallas, TX, USA), which included the Life’s Simple 7(®) My Life Check(®) assessment, to quantify current lifestyle behavior change needs. Furthermore, on the My AFib Experience™ website (American Heart Association, Dallas, TX, USA), the patient used a symptom tracker tool to capture the date, time, frequency, and type of AF symptoms, and these data were subsequently reviewed by the cardiac nurse. Throughout the six-month intervention period, the cardiac nurse used a motivational interviewing approach to support participants’ cardiac health goals. Ultimately, the ACTION intervention was tested in 53 individuals with AF (mean age: 59 ± 11 years; 76% male). Participants were predominantly overweight/obese (79%), had a history of hypertension (62%) or hyperlipidemia (61%), and reported being physically inactive/not preforming any type of regular exercise (52%). The majority (88%) of the participants had one or more Life’s Simple 7(®) measures that could be improved. Most of the participants (98%) liked having a dedicated nurse to work with them on a biweekly basis via the mHealth portal. The most commonly self-reported symptoms were palpitations, fatigue/exercise intolerance, and dyspnea. Seventy percent of the participants had an improvement in their weight and blood pressure as documented within the electronic health record as well as a corresponding improvement in their Life’s Simple 7(®) score at six months. On average, there was a three-pound (1.36-kg) decrease in weight and a 5-mmHg decrease in systolic blood pressure between baseline and at six months. In conclusion, this pilot work provides initial evidence regarding the feasibility of implementing the ACTION intervention and supports testing the ACTION intervention in a larger cohort of AF patients to inform existing AF guidelines and build an evidence base for reducing AF burden through lifestyle modification. MediaSphere Medical 2019-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC7252822/ /pubmed/32494426 http://dx.doi.org/10.19102/icrm.2019.100902 Text en Copyright: © 2019 Innovations in Cardiac Rhythm Management http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Hickey, Kathleen T.
Wan, Elaine
Garan, Hasan
Biviano, Angelo B.
Morrow, John P.
Sciacca, Robert R.
Reading, Meghan
Koleck, Theresa A.
Caceres, Billy
Zhang, Yiyi
Goldenthal, Isaac
Riga, Teresa C.
Masterson Creber, Ruth
A Nurse-led Approach to Improving Cardiac Lifestyle Modification in an Atrial Fibrillation Population
title A Nurse-led Approach to Improving Cardiac Lifestyle Modification in an Atrial Fibrillation Population
title_full A Nurse-led Approach to Improving Cardiac Lifestyle Modification in an Atrial Fibrillation Population
title_fullStr A Nurse-led Approach to Improving Cardiac Lifestyle Modification in an Atrial Fibrillation Population
title_full_unstemmed A Nurse-led Approach to Improving Cardiac Lifestyle Modification in an Atrial Fibrillation Population
title_short A Nurse-led Approach to Improving Cardiac Lifestyle Modification in an Atrial Fibrillation Population
title_sort nurse-led approach to improving cardiac lifestyle modification in an atrial fibrillation population
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7252822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32494426
http://dx.doi.org/10.19102/icrm.2019.100902
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