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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Cardio

Date Submitted: May 13, 2021
Date Accepted: Jul 30, 2021

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Transitions in Technology-Mediated Cardiac Rehabilitation and Self-management: Qualitative Study Using the Theoretical Domains Framework

Tadas S, Pretorius C, Foster EJ, Gorely T, Leslie SJ, Coyle D

Transitions in Technology-Mediated Cardiac Rehabilitation and Self-management: Qualitative Study Using the Theoretical Domains Framework

JMIR Cardio 2021;5(2):e30428

DOI: 10.2196/30428

PMID: 34647892

PMCID: 8554673

Transitions in Technology Mediated Cardiac Rehabilitation and Self-management: A Qualitative Study using the Theoretical Domains Framework

  • Shreya Tadas; 
  • Claudette Pretorius; 
  • Emma J. Foster; 
  • Trish Gorely; 
  • Stephen J. Leslie; 
  • David Coyle

ABSTRACT

Background:

An acute cardiac incident is a life changing event, often necessitating surgery. While surgery has high success rates, rehabilitation, behaviour change, and self-care are critical to long-term health. Recent systematic reviews highlight the potential of technology in this area, but significant shortcomings are also identified, particularly in regard to patient experience.

Objective:

To improve future systems this paper explores the experiences of cardiac patients during key phases post-hospitalisation: recuperation, initial rehabilitation and long term self-management. The key objective is to provide a holistic understanding of behavioural factors that impact people across these phases, understand how experiences evolve over time, and provide user-centred recommendations to improve the design of cardiac rehabilitation and self-management technologies.

Methods:

Semi-structured interviews were conducted with people who attended rehabilitation programs following hospitalisation for an acute cardiac event. Interviews were developed and data is analysed via the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF), a pragmatic framework that synthesizes prior theories of behaviour change.

Results:

Three phases that arise post-hospitalisation are examined: recuperation, rehabilitation, and long-term self-management. Through these phases we describe the impact of key factors and important changes that occur in patients’ experiences over time, including: a desire for and redefinition of normal life; the need for different types of formal and informal knowledge; the benefits of safe-zoning and connectedness; and the need to recognise capability. The use of the TDF allows us to show how factors that influence behaviour evolve over time and identify potential sources of tension.

Conclusions:

The paper provides empirically grounded recommendations for the design of technology-mediated cardiac rehabilitation and self-management systems. Key recommendations include the use of technology to support a normal life; leveraging social influences to extend participants’ sense of normality; the use of technology to provide a safe zone; the need to support both emotional and physical wellbeing; and a focus on recognizing capability and providing recommendations that are positive and reinforce this capability.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Tadas S, Pretorius C, Foster EJ, Gorely T, Leslie SJ, Coyle D

Transitions in Technology-Mediated Cardiac Rehabilitation and Self-management: Qualitative Study Using the Theoretical Domains Framework

JMIR Cardio 2021;5(2):e30428

DOI: 10.2196/30428

PMID: 34647892

PMCID: 8554673

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