App-Based Mindfulness Intervention to Improve Psychological Outcomes in Pretransplant Patients With Heart Failure

Author:

Vandenbogaart Elizabeth1,Gawlinski Anna2,Grimley Karen A.3,Lewis Mary Ann4,Pavlish Carol5

Affiliation:

1. Elizabeth Vandenbogaart is an acute care nurse practitioner on the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Advanced Heart Failure Transplant Team and a guest lecturer and clinical preceptor at the UCLA, School of Nursing, Los Angeles, California.

2. Anna Gawlinski is a professor emerita at the UCLA School of Nursing.

3. Karen A. Grimley is Assistant Dean for the UCLA School of Nursing.

4. Mary Ann Lewis is a professor emerita at the UCLA School of Nursing.

5. Carol Pavlish is a professor emerita at the UCLA School of Nursing.

Abstract

BackgroundPatients hospitalized with life-threatening conditions experience psychological stressors that can lead to anxiety and poor patient outcomes. Mindfulness stress reduction interventions have been shown to decrease stress and anxiety with sustained effect.Local ProblemIn a single center’s cardiac care units, only pharmacological stress reduction options were embedded in the daily care plan.MethodsThis project evaluated the feasibility and effect of a brief mindfulness intervention on stress, anxiety, and resilience in 20 hospitalized patients with advanced heart failure awaiting transplant. A 1-group, pretest-posttest design over a 4-week period was used. The intervention included a one-on-one mindfulness education session and a 12-minute audio-guided tablet computer app for daily self-practice. Outcome variables measured at baseline and 2 and 4 weeks after implementation included stress (10-item Perceived Stress Scale), anxiety (7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder instrument), and resilience (10-item Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale). Statistical analysis included descriptive statistics and repeated-measures analysis of variance with Friedman tests, Bonferroni post hoc tests, and Wilcoxon matched-pairs tests.ResultsSignificant reductions in stress and anxiety and increase in resilience occurred from baseline to 2 weeks and 4 weeks after intervention (all P = .001). Feasibility and acceptability were evident from patient experience survey data and focused interview responses.ConclusionsA brief mindfulness intervention holds promise for improving stress, anxiety, and resilience for patients with advanced heart failure awaiting transplant. Nurse-led stress reduction interventions are imperative for best patient outcomes. An evidence-based intervention of mindfulness practice embedded into daily usual patient care may be a feasible option.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care Nursing,General Medicine

Reference46 articles.

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2. Psychosocial evaluation of candidates for heart transplant and ventricular assist devices: beyond the current consensus;Bui;Circ Heart Fail,2019

3. Prevalence and measurement of anxiety in samples of patients with heart failure;Easton;J Cardiovasc Nurs,2016

4. Association of depression and anxiety before heart transplant with mortality after transplant: a single-center experience;Epstein;Transplant Res Risk Manage,2017

5. Pre-transplant depression as a predictor of adherence and morbidities after orthotopic heart transplantation;Delibasic;J Cardiovasc Surg,2017

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