Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/120630
Title: Illness perceptions in adult congenital heart disease : a multi-center international study
Authors: Rassart, Jessica
Apers, Silke
Kovacs, Adrienne H.
Moons, Philip
Thomet, Corina
Budts, Werner
Enomoto, Junko
Sluman, Maayke A.
Wang, Jou-Kou
Jackson, Jamie L.
Khairy, Paul
Cook, Stephen C.
Subramanyan, Raghavan
Alday, Luis
Eriksen, Katrine
Dellborg, Mikael
Berghammer, Malin
Johansson, Bengt
Rempel, Gwen R.
Menahem, Samuel
Caruana, Maryanne
Veldtman, Gruschen
Soufi, Alexandra
Fernandes, Susan M.
White, Kamila S.
Callus, Edward
Kutty, Shelby
Luyckx, Koen
Authors: APPROACH-IS Consortium and ISACHD
Keywords: Congenital heart disease -- Patients -- Attitudes
Congenital heart disease -- Research -- International cooperation
Quality of life -- Health aspects
Heart -- Abnormalities
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: Elsevier
Citation: Rassart, J., Apers, S., Kovacs, A. H., Moons, P., Thomet, C., Budts, W.,...Luyckx, K. (2017). Illness perceptions in adult congenital heart disease: a multi-center international study. International Journal of Cardiology, 244, 130-138.
Abstract: Background: Illness perceptions are cognitive frameworks that patients construct to make sense of their illness. Although the importance of these perceptions has been demonstrated in other chronic illness populations, few studies have focused on the illness perceptions of adults with congenital heart disease (CHD). This study examined (1) inter-country variation in illness perceptions, (2) associations between patient characteristics and illness perceptions, and (3) associations between illness perceptions and patient-reported outcomes.
Methods: Our sample, taken from APPROACH-IS, consisted of 3258 adults with CHD from 15 different countries. Patients completed questionnaires on illness perceptions and patient-reported outcomes (i.e., quality of life, perceived health status, and symptoms of depression and anxiety). Patient characteristics included sex, age, marital status, educational level, employment status, CHD complexity, functional class, and ethnicity. Linear mixed models were applied.
Results: The inter-country variation in illness perceptions was generally small, yet patients from different countries differed in the extent to which they perceived their illness as chronic and worried about their illness. Patient characteristics that were linked to illness perceptions were sex, age, employment status, CHD complexity, functional class, and ethnicity. Higher scores on consequences, identity, and emotional representation, as well as lower scores on illness coherence and personal and treatment control, were associated with poorer patient-reported outcomes.
Conclusions: This study emphasizes that, in order to gain a deeper understanding of patients' functioning, health-care providers should focus not only on objective indicators of illness severity such as the complexity of the heart defect, but also on subjective illness experiences.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/120630
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