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Release Date: September 21, 1999
Contact: Elise Dusseldorp
+31 71 5273620
dusseldorp@fsw.leidenuniv.nl
Rehabilitation for Heart Patients Reduces Deaths
Health education and stress management rehabilitation programs resulted in 29 percent
fewer heart attacks and 34 percent fewer deaths from coronary disease, according to
research conducted by scientists at Leiden University, the Netherlands.
The results of a meta-analysis of 37 cardiac rehabilitation studies suggest significant
positive effects of rehabilitation programs on blood pressure, cholesterol, body weight,
smoking behavior, physical exercise, and eating habits.
"Thirty years ago it was believed that cardiac rehabilitation programs should just
improve the patients' physical fitness and return them to their jobs," noted Elise
Dusseldorp, lead author of the study. "Nowadays, the programs have expanded to help
patients change their risk behaviors and return to their usual way of life in a much wider
personal, physical and social sense."
The programs most successful in reaching their near-term goals with blood pressure,
smoking, exercise and lowering emotional distress also were most effective on the more
distant goal of reducing heart attacks and deaths from heart disease, the study showed.
The research appears in the current issue of Health Psychology.
The researchers said their study highlights the need to create more psychoeducational
programs in cardiac rehabilitation that combine individually tailored stress management
and health education programs.
However, they said the development of these programs has to be based on theory-driven
research results that link specific elements of the planned interventions with desired
changes in individual patients' risk behaviors and emotional distress as well as the
ultimate goals of preventing further heart attacks and cardiac mortality.
The study was funded by the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research.
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Health Psychology is the official, peer-reviewed research journal
of the Division of Health Psychology (Division 38), American Psychological Association.
For information about the journal, contact David Krantz, PhD, at (301) 295-3273.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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