Patient-reported causes of heart failure in a large European sample

Publication date

2018-05-01

Authors

Timmermans, Ivy
Denollet, Johan
Pedersen, Susanne S.
Meine, MathiasORCID 0000-0002-1102-2155ISNI 0000000369243476
Versteeg, HISNI 0000000393818962

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Background: Patients diagnosed with chronic diseases develop perceptions about their disease and its causes, which may influence health behavior and emotional well-being. This is the first study to examine patient-reported causes and their correlates in patients with heart failure. Methods: European heart failure patients (N = 595) completed questionnaires, including the Brief Illness Perceptions Questionnaire. Using deductive thematic analysis, patient-reported causes were categorized into physical, natural, behavioral, psychosocial, supernatural and other. Clinical data were collected from medical records. Results: Patients who did not report any cause (11%) were on average lower educated and participated less often in cardiac rehabilitation. The majority of the remaining patients reported physical causes (46%, mainly comorbidities), followed by behavioral (38%, mainly smoking), psychosocial (35%, mainly (work-related) stress), and natural causes (32%, mainly heredity). There were socio-demographic, clinical and psychological group differences between the various categories, and large discrepancies between prevalence of physical risk factors according to medical records and patient-reported causes; e.g. 58% had hypertension, while only 5% reported this as a cause. Multivariable analyses indicated trends towards associations between physical causes and poor health status (Odds ratio (OR) = 1.41, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) = 0.95–2.09, p = 0.09), psychosocial causes and psychological distress (OR = 1.54, 95% CI = 0.94–2.51, p = 0.09), and behavioral causes and a less threatening view of heart failure (OR = 0.64, 95% CI = 0.40–1.01, p = 0.06). Conclusion: European patients most frequently reported comorbidities, smoking, stress, and heredity as heart failure causes, but their causal understanding may be limited. There were trends towards associations between patient-reported causes and health status, psychological distress, and illness perceptions.

Keywords

Brief illness perception questionnaire, Heart failure, Patient-reported causes, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Citation

Timmermans, I, Denollet, J, Pedersen, S S, Meine, M & Versteeg, H 2018, 'Patient-reported causes of heart failure in a large European sample', International Journal of Cardiology, vol. 258, pp. 179-184. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2018.01.113