Charlson Mary E, Boutin-Foster Carla, Mancuso Carol A, Peterson Janey C, Ogedegbe Gbenga, Briggs William M, Robbins Laura, Isen Alice M, Allegrante John P
Center for Complementary and Integrative Medicine and Division of General Internal Medicine, Joan and Sanford I. Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2007 Nov;28(6):748-62. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2007.03.002. Epub 2007 Mar 12.
Secondary prevention of adverse outcomes in patients with cardiopulmonary disease requires that patients become actively engaged in self-management efforts such as participation in physical activity or medication adherence. However, despite assiduous efforts to find strategies that help cardiovascular patients to adopt and maintain such behaviors, many studies of interventions designed to improve physical activity and adherence to medication have shown disappointing results. To this end, the Translational Behavioral Science Research Consortium was created by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to identify promising, but underutilized findings from basic behavioral science that might have potential application for translation to clinical populations where behavioral change has been refractory to standard intervention approaches. This paper describes the rationale and methods of a novel research project designed to test the efficacy of a behavioral intervention that combines constructs from two behavioral science theories (positive affect and self-affirmation) in order to help patients with coronary artery disease, asthma, and hypertension successfully change behaviors. The project consists of an intervention framed upon positive affect and self-affirmation and tested in three concurrent randomized controlled trials among three distinct populations. Each trial had a qualitative phase that served as a formative stage to inform the intervention; a pilot phase during which the feasibility of the intervention was tested and refined; and a randomized controlled phase conducted to investigate the effects of the interventions in these three patient groups.
心肺疾病患者不良后果的二级预防要求患者积极参与自我管理,如参加体育活动或坚持服药。然而,尽管人们一直在努力寻找帮助心血管疾病患者采取并维持这些行为的策略,但许多旨在改善体育活动和药物依从性的干预研究结果却令人失望。为此,美国国立心肺血液研究所成立了转化行为科学研究联盟,以确定基础行为科学中那些有前景但未得到充分利用的研究成果,这些成果可能有潜力应用于临床人群,因为在这些人群中,行为改变对标准干预方法反应不佳。本文描述了一个新颖研究项目的基本原理和方法,该项目旨在测试一种行为干预的效果,这种干预结合了两种行为科学理论(积极情绪和自我肯定)的概念,以帮助冠心病、哮喘和高血压患者成功改变行为。该项目包括一个基于积极情绪和自我肯定构建的干预措施,并在三个不同人群中同时进行三项随机对照试验。每项试验都有一个定性阶段作为形成性阶段,为干预提供信息;一个试点阶段,在此期间测试并完善干预措施的可行性;以及一个随机对照阶段,用于研究干预措施对这三组患者的影响。