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M-Health Care for Patients After AMI on Disease Perception, Self-Efficacy, Anxiety and Cardio-Respiratory Fitness

N

National Defense Medical Center, Taiwan

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cardio-respiratory Fitness
Mobile Health
Undefined
Anxiety
Self-efficacy
Acute Myocardial Infarction

Treatments

Combination Product: M-Health

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04438356
M-Health Care for AMI Patients

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of this study is to explore the overall effectiveness of interventions using mobile health care to improve disease perception, self-efficacy, anxiety, cardio-pulmonary fitness for patients with acute myocardial infarction.

Full description

Heart disease is the second leading cause of death in Taiwan. Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the majority, and coronary artery disease is the most common cardiovascular disease. There is an increase, and it is no longer just that the elderly is the predominant group. There is a tendency to gradually become younger. In foreign countries, coronary heart disease is also one of the main causes of patient death and disability, resulting in huge medical burdens and costs. Coronary heart disease also includes acute myocardial infarction, which causes myocardial cell death due to unstable myocardial ischemia. Sudden heart disease brings unexpected shock, fear, and despair to patients and their families. Therefore, patient self-management is very important. It also improves the patient's quality of life.

Post-acute myocardial infarction patients are susceptible to piecemeal information and lack the motivation to change their life style, continue to maintain smoking behavior and do not engage in exercise, leading to the recurrence of major coronary artery problems. In order to reduce secondary cardiovascular problems, it is necessary to rely on the patient's own knowledge of the disease, self-care behavior and self-efficacy, including diet, exercise, etc., so that the disease can be controlled and treated, and also need to monitor and adjust the physical and mental state to reduce subsequent problems caused by anxiety. Therefore, in order to provide multi-party support for patients' self-health care, mobile health care such as mobile phone text messages, applications, and remote monitoring are gradually emerging. Therefore, it is expected that the use of mHealth can be used to develop two-way communication and interaction and a higher message reception rate to stimulate acuteness. After myocardial infarction, patients can change their motivations for self-health care behaviors to achieve more efficient disease perception, self-efficacy, anxiety and cardiopulmonary fitness, and have a longer-term influence ability.

Enrollment

31 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Taiwanese, understand Chinese
  • Patients who are over 20 years old and have AMI (including ST segment ascending and non-ST segment ascending), diagnosed by percutaneous coronary intervention and without complications within 30±5 days, the left ventricular injection rate is greater than 40% .
  • Ability and willingness to provide informed consent.
  • Have a smartphone.
  • Can receive and send smartphone messages.

Exclusion criteria

  • Those who can't express their wishes clearly (such as mental dysfunction)
  • mental disorder
  • Patients who participate in other research projects
  • Planned coronary artery bypass surgery or other diseases that require continuous heart care.
  • Abuse of alcohol or narcotics.
  • Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) is less than 40%.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

31 participants in 2 patient groups

M-health
Experimental group
Description:
After the acute myocardial infarction, patients will be randomly assigned to the intervention group. Give the intervention group mobile health care programs and given Garmin monitoring hands ring. In order to give patients clear walking goals and exercise intensity, the intervention group will use the Mobile Health Medical Line app to remind patients of the walking frequency and time, and use Garmin monitoring bracelet to record the patient's daily walking steps. The Mobile Health Medical Line app content includes: 1. Encourage the walking exercise to perform 2. Give them knowledge about acute myocardial infarction 3. How to self-care themselves 4. How to release their anxiety?
Treatment:
Combination Product: M-Health
wait list control
Experimental group
Description:
wait list control for 3 months and then use the Mobile Health Medical Line app to remind patients of the walking frequency and time, and use Garmin monitoring bracelet to record the patient's daily walking steps. The Mobile Health Medical Line app content includes: 1. Encourage the walking exercise to perform 2. Give them knowledge about acute myocardial infarction 3. How to self-care themselves 4. How to release their anxiety?
Treatment:
Combination Product: M-Health

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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