Division of Cardiac Prevention and Rehabilitation, University of Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Division of Cardiac Prevention and Rehabilitation, University of Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2020 May 6;10(5):e032948. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-032948.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) not only affects the patient, but has implications for the partner. Emerging evidence suggests that supportive couple relationships enhance CVD outcomes and reduce patient and partner distress. To date, however, little research has been done to address the couple relationship as a potentially important component of cardiac care. This article examines the impact of CVD on the couple relationship and assesses the perceived needs and desired intervention components of patients with CVD and their partners.
Qualitative study using directed and conventional content analysis.
Single-centre, tertiary cardiac care hospital that serves a population of 1.4 million in the Champlain region of Ontario, Canada.
Patients with CVD and their partners (n=32, 16 couples) participated in focus groups. Patients were mainly male (75%), white (87.5%), aged 64.4 years (range 31-81 years), with varied cardiac diagnoses (50% coronary artery disease; 18.75% valve disease; 18.75% heart failure; 12.5% arrhythmia).
Five categories were generated from the data reflecting changes within the couple relationship as a result of CVD: (1) emotional and communication disconnection; (2) overprotection of the patient; (3) role changes; (4) adjustment to lifestyle changes; and (5) positive relationship changes. Three categories were constructed regarding intervention needs and desired resources: (1) practical resources; (2) sharing with peers; and (3) relationship enhancement.
Overall, the data suggest that there were profound changes in the couple relationship as a result of CVD, and that there is considerable need to better support the caregiving spouses and the couple as a unit. These results call for interventions designed to provide instrumental support, peer-sharing opportunities and relationship quality enhancement to help couples cope with CVD. Future studies should examine whether couples-based programming embedded into cardiac rehabilitation can be effective at improving relationship quality and reducing patient and partner stress in the aftermath of a cardiac event.
心血管疾病(CVD)不仅影响患者,还会对其伴侣产生影响。新出现的证据表明,支持性的夫妻关系可以改善 CVD 结局并减轻患者和伴侣的痛苦。然而,迄今为止,很少有研究关注夫妻关系作为心脏护理的一个潜在重要组成部分。本文探讨了 CVD 对夫妻关系的影响,并评估了 CVD 患者及其伴侣的感知需求和所需干预内容。
使用定向和常规内容分析的定性研究。
位于加拿大安大略省尚普兰地区,服务于 140 万人口的单中心三级心脏护理医院。
CVD 患者及其伴侣(n=32,16 对夫妻)参加了焦点小组。患者主要为男性(75%),白人(87.5%),年龄 64.4 岁(范围 31-81 岁),患有多种心脏诊断(50%冠心病;18.75%瓣膜病;18.75%心力衰竭;12.5%心律失常)。
数据产生了五个类别,反映了 CVD 对夫妻关系的变化:(1)情感和沟通脱节;(2)过度保护患者;(3)角色变化;(4)适应生活方式改变;(5)积极的关系变化。关于干预需求和所需资源,构建了三个类别:(1)实用资源;(2)与同行分享;(3)关系增强。
总的来说,数据表明 CVD 导致夫妻关系发生了深刻变化,因此需要更好地支持照顾配偶和夫妻双方。这些结果呼吁设计干预措施,提供工具支持、同伴分享机会和关系质量提升,以帮助夫妻应对 CVD。未来的研究应检验将夫妻为基础的方案纳入心脏康复是否可以有效改善关系质量并减轻心脏事件后的患者和伴侣的压力。