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The purpose of this study is to examine the feasibility of providing a problem-solving therapy-based intervention to improve both depressive symptoms and heart failure self-care specifically after hospital discharge. This is because the period after hospital discharge is critical to long-term recovery, overall quality of life, and prevention of adverse outcomes, such as hospital readmission.
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Depressive symptoms and impaired self-care respectively occur in up to 58% and 80% of older hospitalized patients with heart failure, and each doubles the risk of rehospitalization. These two conditions are closely intertwined with shared core behaviors/experiences, i.e., hopelessness/negative expectation, loss of motivation, impaired problem-solving skills, and social isolation/poor social support. As such, integrated interventions that explicitly address both depressive symptoms and impaired HF self-care are more efficacious than interventions that focus on depressive symptoms or HF self-care alone. In separate studies, problem-solving therapy (PST) has been effective to improve depressive symptoms and self-care for heart disease in older adults, including those with mild cognitive impairment. Though promising, there is no evidence regarding PST efficacy in addressing both depressive symptoms and self-care in HF patients. This is due to 1) sample heterogeneity, as only 18% to 77% of the subjects in prior studies had HF, and 2) separate interventional foci, as HF information was not used to link depressed mood to impaired self-care. Characteristics of hospitalized HF patients such as timing and cognitive function were also not considered. The first three months after hospital discharge is the period when depressive symptoms are most likely to change and when impaired HF self-care is mostly likely to lead to rehospitalization. Moreover, more than half (54%) of older depressed HF patients have mild cognitive impairment that can lead to dementia, especially in the context of impaired self-care, uncontrolled HF and restricted cerebral blood flow. However, no PST interventions have been specifically provided in the post-discharge period or among HF patients with mild cognitive impairment. To date, there is no evidence regarding the efficacy of integrated PST interventions on both depressive symptoms and impaired self-care in HF patients after hospital discharge.
The ultimate goal of this research program is to prevent rehospitalization in HF patients using integrated PST interventions to simultaneously improve depressive symptoms and self-care. Built on the investigator's prior work with depressive symptoms in home health care (HHC), this study will examine the feasibility of a home-based, telephone-enhanced PST intervention (PST-HF) in these patients after hospital discharge.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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