Motivational "women-only" cardiac
rehabilitation program improves symptoms of depression
Depressive symptoms improved among women with coronary
heart disease who participated in a motivationally-enhanced cardiac rehabilitation
program exclusively for women, according to research presented at the American
Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2009.
Depression often co-occurs with heart disease and is
found more often in women with heart disease than in men. Depression also interferes
with adherence to lifestyle modifications and the willingness to attend rehabilitation.
"Women often don't have the motivation to attend cardiac
rehab particularly if they're depressed," said Theresa Beckie, Ph.D., lead investigator
and author of the study and professor at the University of South Florida's College
of Nursing in Tampa, Florida. "Historically women have not been socialized to
exercise and their attendance in cardiac rehabilitation programs has been consistently
poor over the last several decades. This poor attendance may be partly due to
mismatches in stages of readiness for behavior change with the health professional
approaching from an action-oriented perspective and the women merely contemplating
change -this is destined to evoke resistance."
Cardiac rehabilitation programs tailored to the needs
of women and to their current level of readiness to change may improve adherence
to such programs and potentially improve outcomes for women, she said.
The primary goals of the 5-year randomized clinical trial
were to compare multiple physiological and psychosocial outcomes of women who
participated in a 12-week stage-of-change matched, motivationally enhanced, gender-tailored
cardiac rehabilitation program exclusively for women compared to women attending
a 12-week traditional cardiac rehabilitation program comprised of education and
exercise. Depressive symptoms of 225 women (average age 63) who completed this
trial were examined after the interventions as well as after a 6-month follow-up
period.
Participants completed the 20-item Center for Epidemiological
Studies Depression Scale prior to beginning the intervention, one week after completing
the intervention, and again six months later. The questionnaire asked them about
how often in the past week they felt depressed, hopeful, lonely, happy and fearful.
Depression scores for the women participating in the
traditional cardiac rehab dropped from 16.5 to 14.3 in 12 weeks, while scores
in the augmented group dropped from 17.3 to 11.0 - "a significant decline compared
to the traditional group," said Beckie.
After a 6-month follow-up, the traditional rehab group
had an average score of 15.2 and those in the women-specific program had an average
score of 13. Beckie said "we found that improvements in depressive symptoms were
sustained at the 6-month follow-up in the augmented group while those in traditional
cardiac rehab were essentially unchanged. This intervention also led to significantly
better attendance and completion rates than those in the traditional cardiac rehabilitation
program."
The intervention was guided by the transtheoretical model
of behavior change and was delivered with motivational interviewing clinical methods.
The motivationally-enhanced intervention began with an assessment of their stage
of motivational readiness to change regarding three behaviors: healthy eating,
physical activity, and stress management. The investigators then applied appropriate
stage-matched strategies to promote the uptake of health behaviors.
"The stage-matched intervention used in conjunction with
motivational interviewing applied the patient-centered principles of expressing
empathy, rolling with resistance to change, respecting patient autonomy and supporting
self-efficacy for change" Beckie said.
"We didn't push them if they weren't ready to make the
changes," Beckie said. "We have found that if some patients receive long lists
of behaviors they are expected to change immediately - such as quitting smoking,
eating healthier, exercising regularly - they are overwhelmed. Pushing such patients
who are not ready can lead them to tune out or drop out. Instead, for these women,
we acknowledged their ambivalence about change and gave them strategies to move
toward being ready by reinforcing their own motivations for changing. It's unrealistic
to expect all patients to change their lifestyle all at once, right now in front
of you."
The woman-centered program is a more individualized approach
to rehabilitation.
"You can't treat everyone the same when it comes to changing
health behaviors," she said. Beckie hopes these results will lead to symptoms
of depression being assessed more often in women suffering from heart disease
and to more motivationally augmented, women-specific rehabilitation options. The
participants may not be completely representative of the national population because
they all had health insurance.
Beckie's co-author is Jason Beckstead, Ph.D. Author disclosures
are on the abstract.
The National Institute of Nursing Research funded the
5-year study.
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