Post-Discharge Self-Care Confidence and Performance Levels in Patients Hospitalized due to Heart Failure

YUKIHIRO HIMENO, HIROKI KITAKATA, TAKASHI KOHNO, S. H.U.N. HASHIMOTO, DAISUKE FUJISAWA, YASUYUKI SHIRAISHI, NAOMI NAKANO, TAKAHIRO HIRAIDE, YOSHIKAZU KISHINO, YOSHINORI KATSUMATA, SHINSUKE YUASA, S. H.U.N. KOHSAKA, MASAKI IEDA

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Multidisciplinary self-care education plays a critical role in ensuring the high-quality transitional care of patients hospitalized due to heart failure (HF). However, whether confidence concerning self-care during their index hospitalizations would influence their post-discharge self-care performances and long-term outcomes remains uncertain. Methods: We conducted an assessment of 100 consecutive patients with HF who completed self-care questionnaires both during their hospitalizations and 1 year after discharge. Among these patients hospitalized due to HF, self-care confidence was assessed immediately after they completed their pre-discharge education program. One year after the index hospitalization, we evaluated self-care performance by using the European Heart Failure Self-care Behavior Scale. Logistic regression analysis was employed to identify determinants of poor self-care behavior 1 year after the hospitalization. Additionally, the Cox proportional hazards model with adjustment for the Seattle Heart Failure Model was applied to assess their association with 2-year mortality and readmission risk. Results: The enrolled patients predominantly had HF with reduced ejection fraction (43.0%), and approximately half of the patients had experienced a previous hospitalization due to HF (47.0%). The 3 worst-performing aspects of post-discharge self-care behavior (among the 12 items) were appropriate consultation for fatigue (40.0%), weight gain (52.0%) and application of regular exercise (57.0%). After adjustment, low self-care confidence during the index hospitalization was associated with poor post-discharge self-care performance (OR: 1.11, CI: 1.00–1.21). Poor post-discharge self-care behavior was not associated with worse prognoses over a 2-year follow-up (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.82, CI: 0.85–3.86); however, the association was significant in patients with reduced ejection fraction (HR: 4.04, CI: 1.17–13.89) and previous HF hospitalization (HR: 3.66, CI: 1.46–9.13). Conclusions: Post-discharge self-care performance was associated with self-care confidence during the index HF hospitalization. Effective measures that improve pre-discharge confidence levels in self-care should be considered to enhance the quality of transitional care.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Cardiac Failure
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2025

Keywords

  • 1-year follow-up
  • Heart failure
  • patient education
  • patient perspective
  • self-care

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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