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Biomedical

Contribution of individual and cumulative frailty-related health deficits on cardiac rehabilitation completion

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Troy Hillier,

Troy Hillier


Evan MacEachern,

Evan MacEachern


Dustin S. Kehler,

Dustin S. Kehler


Nicholas Giacomantonio

Nicholas Giacomantonio


  Peer Reviewed

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© attribution CC-BY

  • 0

rating
545 Views

Added on

2024-11-17

Doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12877-022-03624-0

Abstract

Key Questions

1. What is the relationship between frailty and cardiac rehabilitation (CR) completion?

Frailty-related deficits significantly influence CR completion, with both traditional and non-traditional cardiovascular deficits playing distinct roles.

2. How do traditional and non-traditional cardiovascular deficits affect CR completion?

Traditional cardiovascular deficits (e.g., biomarkers) are associated with higher odds of completion, while non-traditional measures (e.g., quality of life) predict non-completion.

3. What factors contribute most to CR non-completion?

Non-traditional deficits, including lower quality-of-life scores and higher body composition deficits, are strong predictors of program non-completion.

4. How can CR retention rates be improved?

Interventions targeting quality of life, including mental health support and personalized strategies for individuals with higher frailty-related deficits, could improve retention.


Abstract

Background

Despite the high burden of frailty among cardiac rehabilitation (CR) participants, it is unclear which frailty-related deficits are related to program completion.

Methods

Data from a single-center CR program were analyzed. A frailty index (FI) was constructed based on 25 health deficits. Logistic regression assessed the odds of CR completion relative to these deficits.

Results

Of 3,756 individuals, 16 frailty-related deficits were significantly associated with CR completion. Traditional deficits increased completion odds, while non-traditional measures predicted non-completion. Higher food frequency questionnaire scores had the strongest positive association, whereas recent health decline had the strongest negative association.

Conclusion

Frailty-related deficits impact CR completion. Targeted interventions focusing on non-traditional measures, such as quality-of-life improvements, are recommended to enhance program retention.

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ARTICLE USAGE


Article usage: Nov-2024 to Jun-2025
Show by month Manuscript Video Summary
2025 June 95 95
2025 May 121 121
2025 April 61 61
2025 March 67 67
2025 February 47 47
2025 January 48 48
2024 December 68 68
2024 November 38 38
Total 545 545
Show by month Manuscript Video Summary
2025 June 95 95
2025 May 121 121
2025 April 61 61
2025 March 67 67
2025 February 47 47
2025 January 48 48
2024 December 68 68
2024 November 38 38
Total 545 545
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copyright icon

© attribution CC-BY

  • 0

rating
545 Views

Added on

2024-11-17

Doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12877-022-03624-0

Related Subjects
Anatomy
Biochemistry
Epidemiology
Genetics
Neuroscience
Psychology
Oncology
Medicine
Musculoskeletal science
Pediatrics
Pathology
Pharmacology
Physiology
Psychiatry
Primary care
Women and reproductive health

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