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The Influence of Caregiver Contribution to Self-care on Symptom Burden in Patients With Heart Failure and the Mediating Role of Patient Self-care: A Longitudinal Mediation Analysis.

Authors :
Locatelli, Giulia
Iovino, Paolo
Jurgens, Corrine Y.
Alvaro, Rosaria
Uchmanowicz, Izabella
Rasero, Laura
Riegel, Barbara
Vellone, Ercole
Source :
Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing; May/Jun2024, Vol. 39 Issue 3, p255-265, 11p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Patients with heart failure experience high symptom burden, which can be mitigated with adequate selfcare. Caregiver contribution to self-care has been theorized to improve patient symptom burden. The mediating role of patient self-care in this relationship has not been tested yet. Objectives: The aim of this study was to test whether (a) caregiver contribution to self-care influences patient self-care, (b) patient self-care influences symptom burden, and (c) patient self-care mediates the relationship between caregiver contribution to self-care and symptom burden. Methods: In this study, the authors conducted a secondary analysis of the baseline and 3-month data from theMOTIVATE-HF trial, which enrolled 510 dyads (patient with heart failure and caregiver) in Italy. Multigroup confirmatory factor analysis was used to test measurement invariance. Autoregressive longitudinal path analysis with contemporaneous mediation was used to test our hypotheses. Results: On average, caregivers were 54 years old andmainly female, whereas patientswere 72.4 years old and mainly male. Better caregiver contribution to self-care maintenance was associated with better patient self-caremaintenance (γ = 0.280, P < .001), which, in turn, was associated with lower symptomburden (γ = -0.280, P < .001). Patient self-care maintenance mediated the effect of caregiver contribution to self-care maintenance on symptom burden (γ = -0.079; 95% bias-corrected bootstrapped confidence interval, -0.130 to -0.043). Better caregiver contribution to self-care management was associated with better patient self-care management (γ = 0.238, P = .006). The model significantly accounted for 37% of the total variance in symptom burden scores (P < .001). Conclusions: This study expands the situation-specific theory of caregiver contribution to heart failure self-care and provides new evidence on the role of caregiver contribution to self-care and patient self-care on symptom burden in heart failure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08894655
Volume :
39
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176853427
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/JCN.0000000000001024