TY - JOUR
T1 - Post-Discharge Self-Care Confidence and Performance Levels in Patients Hospitalized due to Heart Failure
AU - HIMENO, YUKIHIRO
AU - KITAKATA, HIROKI
AU - KOHNO, TAKASHI
AU - HASHIMOTO, S. H.U.N.
AU - FUJISAWA, DAISUKE
AU - SHIRAISHI, YASUYUKI
AU - NAKANO, NAOMI
AU - HIRAIDE, TAKAHIRO
AU - KISHINO, YOSHIKAZU
AU - KATSUMATA, YOSHINORI
AU - YUASA, SHINSUKE
AU - KOHSAKA, S. H.U.N.
AU - IEDA, MASAKI
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - 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.
AB - 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.
KW - 1-year follow-up
KW - Heart failure
KW - patient education
KW - patient perspective
KW - self-care
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U2 - 10.1016/j.cardfail.2024.10.441
DO - 10.1016/j.cardfail.2024.10.441
M3 - Article
C2 - 39571967
AN - SCOPUS:85213551936
SN - 1071-9164
JO - Journal of Cardiac Failure
JF - Journal of Cardiac Failure
ER -