A randomized clinical trial of nursing care for recovery from cardiac surgery.
To determine the efficacy of a psychoeducational nursing intervention in patients who receive coronary artery bypass graft and valve repair surgery.A cluster-randomized controlled trial design.Two hospitals in the western United States--a large community hospital with an active cardiovascular surgery practice and a health-sciences research center.156 patients between 25 and 75 years of age, 125 (81.1%) men, and 31 (19.9%) women, all with primary care givers.Self-efficacy expectations, activities (behavior performance), quality of life, mood state.Supplemental in-hospital education followed by telephone contact from discharge to eighth week after discharge.Patients in the experimental group reported significantly greater self-efficacy expectations for walking and behavior performance for walking, lifting, climbing stairs, general exertion and, where applicable, for working.This trial suggests that a low-intensity psychoeducational nursing intervention can promote self-efficacy expectations for walking in recovery and is associated with more self-reported walking and lifting behavior after cardiac surgery.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Treatment Outcome
- Self Care
- Regression Analysis
- Quality of Life
- Perioperative Nursing
- Patient Education as Topic
- Patient Discharge
- Nursing
- Middle Aged
- Male
Citation
Published In
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Treatment Outcome
- Self Care
- Regression Analysis
- Quality of Life
- Perioperative Nursing
- Patient Education as Topic
- Patient Discharge
- Nursing
- Middle Aged
- Male