Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 118-126 , 01/03/2009

A model predicting health status of patients with heart failure

Jom Suwanno, Wongchan Petpichetchian, Barbara Riegel, Sang Arun Issaramalai

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To test the causal relationships among the components of sociodemographic (age, gender, education, and income), illness characteristics (duration of illness, severity of illness, and comorbid diseases), and self-management ability, and health status in the model of health status of patients with heart failure (HSHF). DESIGN: Descriptive cross-sectional study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Participants were 400 heart failure patients hospitalized or attending an out patient clinic at six hospitals in southern Thailand. A survey-interview method was used for data collection. Questionnaires were related to study factors including sociodemographics, duration of illness, the New York Heart Association Functional Classification (NYHA-FC), the Charlson Comorbidity Index, the Self-Care of Heart Failure Index (SCHFI), the Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF-36). The relationship of the study variables was tested and modified under the structural equation modeling (SEM) technique by using LISREL. RESULTS: The initial hypothesized model did not fit the data. The modified model adequately fit the data and accounted for 64% of the variance in health status. Age had a direct negative effect on health status (β = -0.20, P < 0.01) and had an indirect negative effect on health status through self-management ability, severity of illness and comorbid disease (β = -0.13, P < 0.01). Education had a direct positive effect on health status (β = 0.12, P < 0.01). Gender and income had indirect negative effects on health status through severity of illness (β = -0.05; -0.05, P < 0.05). Duration of illness had an indirect positive effect on health status through self-management ability (β = 0.09, P < 0.05). Severity of illness and comorbid disease had a direct negative effect on health status (β = -0.31; -0.16, P < 0.01, respectively) and indirect negative effect on health status through self-management ability (β = -0.06; -0.05, P < 0.05, respectively). Self-management ability had a direct positive effect on health status (β = 0.38, P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: This model provides a guideline for explaining and predicting health status of patients with heart failure. Continuity care programs promoting self-management ability should be developed and implemented both in hospital-based and home-based settings in order to improve health status. © 2009 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

Health statusHeart failureSelf-careSelf-management

ASJC Subject Area

Medicine : Cardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineNursing : Advanced and Specialized Nursing


Bibliography


Suwanno, J., Petpichetchian, W., Riegel, B., & Issaramalai, S. (2009). A model predicting health status of patients with heart failure. Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, 24(2) 118-126. doi:10.1097/JCN.0b013e318197a75c

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