4.6 Article

Complexities of patient choice in cardiac rehabilitation: qualitative findings

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
Volume 67, Issue 3, Pages 540-549

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2010.05509.x

Keywords

cardiac rehabilitation; home-based rehabilitation; nursing; patient choice; qualitative research; service evaluation

Categories

Funding

  1. British Heart Foundation

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Aim. This paper is a report of a study of the choices patients make when offered home-based or hospital-based cardiac rehabilitation. Background. In some countries, patients may be offered a choice of home-based or hospital-based cardiac rehabilitation. While evaluating a home-based programme, Road to Recovery, developed by the British Heart Foundation, we examined patients' experiences of being offered this choice. Methods. Interviews were conducted with 35 patients and 12 staff members delivering the pilot programme in five rehabilitation services during 2006-2008. Findings. While the staff members interviewed reported that all patients were given a clear choice between a home-based and hospital-based or community-based programme, this choice was less clear-cut in the patient interviews. When choice was offered, the choice of a home-based programme was often based on constraints rather than on being a positive choice. Obstacles patients faced in making the choice included lack of information on which to base a choice; inadequate systems of referral; insufficient appropriately trained staff; restricted choice of times to attend the hospital programmes; the geographical location of services and restrictive socioeconomic factors (inflexible working hours, access to transport). Conclusion. The possibility of informed choice relies in the first instance on the availability and accessibility of appropriate services. Nurses need awareness and commitment to finding out about and overcoming obstacles that impede patient participation in cardiac rehabilitation. Only ill this manner will it be possible to fulfil the calls in national and some international clinical guidelines for 'individualized' or 'menu-based' programmes tailored to specific patient needs.

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