Increasingly, studies use social media to recruit, enroll, and collect data from participants. This introduces a threat to data integrity: efforts to produce fraudulent data to receive participant compensation, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: A Virtual Patient Tour (VPT) was developed to inform cardiac surgery patients about their hospitalization from the admission to their postoperative stay on the ward. The objective of our study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of this VPT following the framework of the Virtual Reality Clinical Outcomes Research Experts Committee.
Methods: In this single-centre cross-sectional study, adult patients admitted to the hospital for elective cardiac surgery were included.
Aims: To optimize support by healthcare professionals to enhance physical activity, HF-related symptom monitoring, and management in patients with heart failure before and after cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) implantation in co-creation with patients, informal caregivers, and healthcare professionals.
Methods And Results: A qualitative and co-design approach was used to develop support strategies collaboratively with end-users. Seventeen semi-structured interviews were conducted to explore patients' expectations and factors influencing physical activity and symptom management.
Patient Educ Couns
June 2024
Objective: Insights into how symptoms influence self-care can guide patient education and improve symptom control. This study examined symptom characteristics, causal attributions, and contextual factors influencing self-care of adults with arthritis, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, or heart failure.
Methods: Adults (n = 81) with a symptomatic chronic illness participated in a longitudinal observational study.
Objective: The aim of this study was to identify for the first time patterns of self-care decision-making (i.e. the extent to which participants viewed contextual factors influencing decisions about symptoms) and associated factors among community-dwelling adults with chronic illness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Chronically medically ill patients often need clinical assistance with symptom management, as well as self-care interventions that can help to reduce the impact of bothersome symptoms. Experienced clinicians can help to guide the development of more effective self-care interventions.
Objective: To create a consensus-based list of common bothersome symptoms of chronic conditions and of self-care management behaviors recommended to patients by clinicians to reduce the impact of these symptoms.
Background: Self-care (SC) is a cornerstone in heart failure management and is related to patient outcomes. The continuous and complex demands of SC can be experienced as stressful and may require patients to apply resilient behaviors as they manage their conditions. Resilience may be a helpful factor in performing SC.
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