Identifying Elements for a Cardiac Rehabilitation Program for Caregivers: An International Delphi Consensus
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Domain 1—Population
3.2. Domain 2—Concept
3.3. Domain 3—Context
4. Discussion
5. Strengths and Limitations of the Study
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Country | Professional Profile | |
---|---|---|
Australia | Researcher | ** |
Researcher and Nurse | ||
Brazil | Cardiologist | * |
Exercise physiologist | ** | |
Nurse | ** | |
Nurse | ** | |
Nurse | * | |
Physiotherapist | ||
Bulgaria | PRM physician | * |
Canada | Physiotherapist | |
China | Nurse | |
Croatia | Nurse | |
Nurse | ||
Czechia | Physiotherapist | |
Egypt | Physiotherapist | * |
France | Cardiologist | ** |
Germany | Researcher | |
Iran | Exercise physiologist | * |
Nurse | ||
Italy | Cardiologist | |
Cardiologist | ** | |
Cardiologist | ** | |
Nurse | ||
Japan | Physiotherapist | |
Mexico | Cardiologist | * |
Cardiologist | * | |
Portugal | Cardiologist | |
Cardiologist | ||
Nutritionist | ||
Nutritionist | ||
Rehabilitation Nurse | ||
Rehabilitation Nurse | ||
Rehabilitation Nurse | ||
Researcher and Exercise physiologist | ** | |
Romania | Cardiologist | * |
UK | Academic researcher | |
Physiotherapist | ** | |
Rehabilitation Nurse | ||
USA | Cardiologist | |
Cardiologist | * | |
Cardiologist |
First Round | 1—Strongly Disagree | 2—Disagree | 3—Neither Agree nor Disagree | 4—I Agree | 5—Totally Agree | Results |
1. Cardiac rehabilitation programs must involve the dyad person with cardiac disease and the caregiver/family | 0% | 2.33% | 6.98% | 16.28% | 74.41% | Accepted 90.69% |
2. Regardless of the person’s cardiac disease, the caregiver benefits from being integrated into the cardiac rehabilitation program. | 0% | 0% | 11.63% | 23.26% | 65.11% | Accepted 88.37% |
3. Caregivers of patients with heart disease benefit from “Health education” sessions, which integrate information about the disease, treatments/medication, diet, and risk factors | 0% | 2.2% | 0% | 19.6% | 78.3% | Accepted 97.9% |
4. Often, patients and caregivers share cardiovascular risk factors, so intervention aimed at both is opportune | 4.3% | 19% | 13% | 32.6% | 50% | Accepted 82.6% |
5. Physical exercise can also be prescribed for the caregiver | 2.2% | 8.7% | 23.9% | 34.8% | 30.4% | Rejected 65.2% |
6. Cardiac rehabilitation can be, for caregivers, also a primary prevention intervention | 2.2% | 0% | 13% | 39.1% | 45.7% | Accepted 84.8% |
7. The participation of caregivers can increase patient adherence to cardiac rehabilitation programs | 0% | 0% | 0% | 26.1% | 73.9% | Accepted 100% |
8. Home-based programs are the most suitable for integrating caregivers | 2.2% | 8.7% | 30.4% | 28.3% | 30.4% | Rejected 58.7% |
9. The use of cardiac telerehabilitation can expand the possibility of integrating caregivers into CR programs | 0% | 0% | 17.4% | 32.6% | 50% | Accepted 82.6% |
Second Round | 1—Strongly Disagree | 2—Disagree | 3—Neither Agree nor Disagree | 4—I Agree | 5—Totally Agree | Results/ |
1. Caregivers of patients with heart disease may benefit from cardiac rehabilitation programs and should, therefore, be encouraged to participate alongside their relatives in these programs. | 0% | 0% | 14% | 34% | 52% | Accepted 87% |
2. Caregivers of patients with heart disease may benefit from health education sessions comprising information about the disease, nutrition, physical activity, and basic life support training | 0% | 0% | 3% | 10% | 87% | Accepted 97% |
3. It is likely that caregivers of patients with heart disease s and patients share cardiovascular risk factors and, therefore, they may also benefit from participating in the patients’ risk factor management | 0% | 7% | 10% | 21% | 62% | Accepted 83% |
4. Cardiac rehabilitation can be helpful as a primary prevention intervention for caregivers of patients with heart disease. | 0% | 3% | 14% | 14% | 69% | Accepted 83% |
5. The integration of caregivers in cardiac rehabilitation programs is likely to increase the adherence of cardiac patients to programs and, therefore, should be encouraged | 0% | 0% | 0% | 24% | 76% | Accepted 100% |
6. Phases II and III of cardiac rehabilitation may be the most suitable moments to integrate caregivers into these programs | 0% | 3% | 3% | 45% | 48% | Accepted 93% |
7. Telerehabilitation may be a methodology to facilitate the integration of caregivers in cardiac rehabilitation programs | 0% | 7% | 10% | 48% | 34% | Accepted 82% |
Third Round | Comments/Suggestions | Class of Recomendadion | ||||
1. Caregivers of patients with heart disease may benefit from cardiac rehabilitation programs and, therefore, should be encouraged to participate alongside the heart disease patient they support in cardiac rehabilitation programs | Suggested change—“therefore should be encouraged to participate alongside their relatives in these programs” to “should be encouraged to participate alongside the heart disease patient they support in cardiac rehabilitation programs”. | II | ||||
2. Caregivers of patients with heart disease may benefit from health education sessions comprising information about the disease, nutrition, physical activity, and basic life support training. | I | |||||
3. It is likely that caregivers of patients with heart disease and patients share cardiovascular risk factors and, therefore, they may also benefit from participating in the patients’ risk factor management | II | |||||
4. Cardiac rehabilitation can be helpful as a primary prevention intervention for caregivers of patients with heart disease. | II | |||||
5. The integration of caregivers in cardiac rehabilitation programs is likely to increase the adherence of cardiac patients to programs and, therefore, should be encouraged | I | |||||
6. Phases II and III of cardiac rehabilitation may be the most suitable moments to integrate caregivers into these programs | II | |||||
7. Telerehabilitation may be a methodology to facilitate the integration of caregivers in cardiac rehabilitation programs | Suggest changing “ methodology” to “method”. | II |
Recommendations | Class of Recommendation |
---|---|
1. Caregivers of patients with heart disease may benefit from cardiac rehabilitation programs and should be encouraged to participate alongside the patients they support in such programs. | IIb |
2. Caregivers of patients with heart disease may benefit from health education sessions comprising information about the disease, nutrition, physical activity, and basic life support training. | I |
3. It is likely that caregivers of patients with heart disease and patients share cardiovascular risk factors and, therefore, they may also benefit from participating in the patients’ risk factor management. | IIb |
4. Cardiac rehabilitation can be helpful as a primary prevention intervention for caregivers of patients with heart disease. | IIa |
5. The integration of caregivers into cardiac rehabilitation programs is likely to increase the adherence of cardiac patients to programs and, therefore, should be encouraged. | I |
6. Phases II and III of cardiac rehabilitation may be the most suitable for integrating caregivers into these programs. | IIb |
7. Telerehabilitation may be a method to facilitate the integration of caregivers in cardiac rehabilitation programs. | IIb |
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Loureiro, M.; Duarte, J.; Mendes, E.; Oliveira, I.; Coutinho, G.; Martins, M.M.; Novo, A. Identifying Elements for a Cardiac Rehabilitation Program for Caregivers: An International Delphi Consensus. Healthcare 2024, 12, 2049. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12202049
Loureiro M, Duarte J, Mendes E, Oliveira I, Coutinho G, Martins MM, Novo A. Identifying Elements for a Cardiac Rehabilitation Program for Caregivers: An International Delphi Consensus. Healthcare. 2024; 12(20):2049. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12202049
Chicago/Turabian StyleLoureiro, Maria, João Duarte, Eugénia Mendes, Isabel Oliveira, Gonçalo Coutinho, Maria Manuela Martins, and André Novo. 2024. "Identifying Elements for a Cardiac Rehabilitation Program for Caregivers: An International Delphi Consensus" Healthcare 12, no. 20: 2049. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12202049
APA StyleLoureiro, M., Duarte, J., Mendes, E., Oliveira, I., Coutinho, G., Martins, M. M., & Novo, A. (2024). Identifying Elements for a Cardiac Rehabilitation Program for Caregivers: An International Delphi Consensus. Healthcare, 12(20), 2049. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12202049