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Goal setting among older adults starting mobile health cardiac rehabilitation in the RESILIENT trial.

Authors :
Shwayder, Elianna
Dodson, John A.
Tellez, Kelly
Johanek, Camila
Adhikari, Samrachana
Meng, Yuchen
Schoenthaler, Antoinette
Jennings, Lee A.
Source :
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society; Jul2024, Vol. 72 Issue 7, p2157-2166, 10p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: There is growing recognition that healthcare should align with individuals' health priorities; however, these priorities remain undefined, especially among older adults. The Rehabilitation Using Mobile Health for Older Adults with Ischemic Heart Disease in the Home Setting (RESILIENT) trial, designed to test the efficacy of mobile health cardiac rehabilitation (mHealth‐CR) in an older cohort, also measures the attainment of participant‐defined health outcome goals as a prespecified secondary endpoint. This study aimed to characterize the health priorities of older adults with ischemic heart disease (IHD) using goal attainment scaling—a technique for measuring individualized goal achievement—in a sample of 100 RESILIENT participants. Methods: The ongoing RESILIENT trial randomizes patients aged ≥65 years with IHD (defined as hospitalization for acute coronary syndrome and/or coronary revascularization), to receive mHealth‐CR or usual care. For the current study, we qualitatively coded baseline goal attainment scales from randomly selected batches of 20 participants to identify participants' cardiac rehabilitation outcome goals and their perceptions of barriers and action plans for goal attainment. We used a deductive framework (i.e., 4 value categories from Patient Priorities Care) and inductive approaches to code and analyze interviews until thematic saturation. Results: This sample of 100 older adults set diverse health outcome goals. Most (54.6%) prioritized physical activity, fewer (17.1%) identified symptom management, fewer still (13.7%) prioritized health metrics, mostly comprised of weight loss goals (10.3%), and the fewest (<4%) were related to clinical metrics such as reducing cholesterol or preventing hospital readmission. Participants anticipated extrinsic (access to places to exercise, time) and intrinsic (non‐cardiac pain, motivation) barriers. Action plans detailed strategies for exercise, motivation, accountability, and overcoming time constraints. Conclusions: Using goal attainment scaling, we elicited specific and measurable goals among older adults with IHD beginning cardiac rehabilitation. Priorities were predominantly functional, diverging from clinical metrics emphasized by clinicians and healthcare systems. See related Editorial by Shanahan and Naik [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00028614
Volume :
72
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178297119
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.18868