Affiliation:
1. School of Psychological Sciences Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health Manchester Academic Health Science Centre University of Manchester United Kingdom
2. Department of Research and Innovation Greater Manchester Mental Health Trust Manchester Academic Health Science Centre Manchester United Kingdom
3. Division of Clinical Psychology Psychological Sciences University of Liverpool United Kingdom
Abstract
Background
Psychological distress is prevalent among patients with cardiovascular disease and is linked to increased risk of future cardiac events. Cardiac rehabilitation (
CR
) is widely recommended for treating psychological distress but has been of limited benefit. This study aims to understand how distressed cardiac patients describe their emotional needs and the response of
CR
.
Methods and Results
A qualitative descriptive study was conducted with 46 patients who screened positively for anxiety and/or depression. Semi‐structured interviews were held, and data were analyzed using a constant comparative approach. Patients described low mood and diverse concerns, including threat of another cardiac event, restrictions on their lives, and problems unrelated to their health. Patients described worrying constantly about these concerns, worrying about their worry, and feeling that worry was uncontrollable and harmful. Patients wanted to “get back to normal” but lacked any sense of how to achieve this and were reluctant to discuss their worries with
CR
staff. They hoped to recover over time, meanwhile seeking reassurance that they were responding “normally.” Patients were mostly dismissive of psychological techniques used in
CR
.
Conclusions
These findings expose a conundrum. Distressed
CR
patients have diverse worries but do not generally want to discuss them, so they invest hopes for feeling better in time passing and reassurance. An intervention acceptable to
CR
patients would allow them to address diverse worries but without having to share the content of worries, would have “face validity,” and would address patients’ worry about worry. Metacognitive therapy is an intervention that might be suitable.
Clinical Trial Registration
URL
:
https://www.clinicaltrials.gov
. Unique identifier:
NCT
02420431.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine