Huffman Jeff C, Moore Shannon V, DuBois Christina M, Mastromauro Carol A, Suarez Laura, Park Elyse R
a Department of Psychiatry , Massachusetts General Hospital , 55 Fruit Street/Blake 11, Boston , MA , USA.
Psychol Health Med. 2015;20(5):541-50. doi: 10.1080/13548506.2014.989531. Epub 2014 Dec 15.
Adherence to cardiac health behaviors is a critical predictor of prognosis in the months following an acute coronary syndrome (ACS). However, there has been minimal concomitant study of multiple nonadherence risk factors, as assessed via record review, structured assessments, and qualitative interviews, among hospitalized ACS patients. Accordingly, we completed an exploratory mixed methods study with 22 individuals who were admitted for ACS and had suboptimal pre-ACS adherence to physical activity, heart-healthy diet, and/or medications, defined by a Medical Outcomes Study Specific Adherence Scale (MOS SAS) score <15/18. During hospitalization, participants underwent quantitative assessments of sociodemographic, medical, and psychological variables, followed by in-depth semi-structured interviews to explore intentions, plans, and perceived barriers related to post-discharge health behavior changes. The MOS SAS was readministered at 3 months and participants were designated as persistently nonadherent (MOS SAS <15; n = 9) or newly adherent (n = 13). Interviews were transcribed and coded by trained raters via content analysis, and quantitative variables were compared between groups using chi-square analysis and independent-samples t-tests. On our primary qualitative analysis, we found that participants with vaguely described intentions/plans regarding health behavior change, and those who focused on barriers to change that were perceived as static, were more likely to be persistently nonadherent. On exploratory quantitative analyses, greater medical burden, diabetes, depressive symptoms, and low optimism/positive affect at baseline were associated with subsequent post-ACS nonadherence (all p < .05). In conclusion, this appears to be the first study to prospectively examine all of these constructs in hospitalized ACS patients, and we found that specific factors were associated with nonadherence to key health behaviors 3 months later. Therefore it may be possible to predict future nonadherence in ACS patients, even during hospitalization, and specific interventions during admission may be indicated to prevent adverse outcomes among patients at highest risk for post-ACS nonadherence.
坚持心脏健康行为是急性冠状动脉综合征(ACS)后数月预后的关键预测指标。然而,对于住院的ACS患者,通过记录审查、结构化评估和定性访谈评估的多种不依从风险因素的伴随研究却很少。因此,我们完成了一项探索性混合方法研究,研究对象为22名因ACS入院且在ACS前对体育活动、心脏健康饮食和/或药物的依从性欠佳的患者,依从性欠佳定义为医学结局研究特定依从性量表(MOS SAS)得分<15/18。在住院期间,参与者接受了社会人口学、医学和心理变量的定量评估,随后进行了深入的半结构化访谈,以探讨与出院后健康行为改变相关的意图、计划和感知障碍。在3个月时再次进行MOS SAS评估,参与者被分为持续不依从(MOS SAS<15;n = 9)或新依从(n = 13)。访谈由经过培训的评分者通过内容分析进行转录和编码,使用卡方分析和独立样本t检验对两组之间的定量变量进行比较。在我们的主要定性分析中,我们发现那些对健康行为改变意图/计划描述模糊的参与者,以及那些关注被视为静态的改变障碍的参与者,更有可能持续不依从。在探索性定量分析中,更大的医疗负担、糖尿病、抑郁症状以及基线时低乐观/积极情绪与ACS后随后的不依从相关(所有p<.05)。总之,这似乎是第一项前瞻性研究住院ACS患者所有这些因素的研究,我们发现特定因素与3个月后关键健康行为的不依从相关。因此,即使在住院期间,也有可能预测ACS患者未来的不依从情况,并且可能需要在入院期间进行特定干预,以预防ACS后不依从风险最高的患者出现不良结局。