Deakin University
Browse

Cardiac rehabilitation and secondary prevention of CVD: time to think about cardiovascular health rather than rehabilitation

Version 2 2024-10-20, 00:19
Version 1 2024-10-11, 03:10
journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-20, 00:19 authored by Julie Redfern, Robyn Gallagher, Andrew Maiorana, Dion Candelaria, Matthew Hollings, Sarah GauciSarah Gauci, Adrienne O’Neil, Georgia K Chaseling, Ling Zhang, Emma E Thomas, Gabriela LM Ghisi, Irene Gibson, Karice Hyun, Alexis Beatty, Tom Briffa, Rod S Taylor, Ross Arena, Catriona Jennings, David Wood, Sherry L Grace
AbstractDuring the past century, there have been major developments in the medical and surgical treatment of cardiovascular disease (CVD). These advancements have resulted in more people surviving initial events and having reduced length of stay in hospital; consequently, there is an increasing number of people in need of ongoing and lifelong cardiovascular risk management. The physical and emotional effects of living with CVD are ongoing with broad challenges ranging from the individual to system level. However, post-discharge care of people with coronary disease continues to follow a 50-year-old cardiac rehabilitation model which focuses on the sub-acute phase and is of a finite in duration. The aim of this paper is to consider the concept of supporting survivors to live well with CVD rather than ‘rehabilitating’ them and propose factors for consideration in reframing secondary prevention towards optimizing cardiovascular health. We discuss deeply-held potential considerations and challenges associated with the concept of supporting survivors achieve optimal cardiovascular health and live well with CVD rather than ‘rehabilitating’ them. We propose the concept of 5 x P’s for reframing traditional cardiac rehabilitation towards the concept of cardiovascular health for survivors beyond ‘rehabilitation’. These include the need for personalization, processes, patient-centered care, parlance, and partnership. Taken together, consideration of challenges at the systems and population level will ultimately improve engagement with secondary prevention as well as outcomes for all people who need it.

History

Journal

npj Cardiovascular Health

Volume

1

Article number

22

Pagination

1-6

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2948-2836

eISSN

2948-2836

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Nature Research

Usage metrics

    Research Publications

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC