Contribution of patient and physician factors to cardiac rehabilitation enrollment: a prospective multilevel study

Author:

Grace Sherry L.123,Gravely-Witte Shannon12,Brual Janette12,Monette George1,Suskin Neville4,Higginson Lyall5,Alter David A.678,Stewart Donna E.23

Affiliation:

1. York University

2. University Health Network Women's Health Program

3. The University of Toronto

4. London Health Sciences Centre and University of Western Ontario, London

5. University of Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, Canada

6. Institute for Clinical and Evaluative Sciences

7. St Michael's Hospital

8. Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, Toronto

Abstract

Background Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is an established means of reducing mortality, yet is grossly underutilized. This is due to both health system and patient-level factors; issues that have yet to be investigated concurrently. This study utilized a hierarchical design to examine physician and patient-level factors affecting verified CR enrollment. Design A prospective multisite study, using a multilevel design of 1490 coronary artery disease outpatients nested within 97 Ontario cardiology practices (mean 15 per cardiologist). Methods Cardiologists completed a survey regarding CR attitudes. Outpatients were surveyed prospectively to assess factors affecting CR enrollment. Patients were mailed a follow-up survey 9 months later to self-report CR enrollment This was verified with 40 CR sites. Results Five hundred and fifty (43.4%) outpatients were referred, and 469 (37.0%) enrolled in CR. In mixed logistic regression analyses, factors affecting verified CR enrollment were greater strength of physician endorsement ( P = 0.005), shorter distance to CR ( P = 0.001), being married ( P = 0.01), and fewer perceived CR barriers ( P = 0.03). Conclusion Both physician and patient factors play a part in CR enrollment. Patient CR barriers should be addressed during referral discussions, and reasons why physicians fail to uniformly endorse CR exploration. Although distance to CR was related to patient enrollment patterns, greater access to home-based CR services should be provided.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Epidemiology

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