Title of article
Changes in patients’ illness representations before and after elective percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty
Author/Authors
Astin، نويسنده , , Felicity and Jones، نويسنده , , Kenneth، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
8
From page
293
To page
300
Abstract
Background
ve percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) is an increasingly popular treatment for coronary heart disease, but little is known about individuals’ cognitive responses to this intervention. As part of adapting to living with chronic disease, individuals develop unique models, or illness representations, which enable them to “make sense” of their predicament. Inaccurate illness representations have a negative affect on patient behaviors and outcomes.
ive
urpose of this study was to examine changes in patients’ self-reported illness representations before and after first-time elective PTCA.
s
s descriptive, repeated-measures design, illness representations were evaluated in 117 consecutive patients attending a pre-PTCA clinic using the Illness Perceptions Questionnaire. Data were collected pre- and 6 to 8 months post-elective PTCA.
s
cal participant was male (75%), of European ethnicity (90%), and aged 62 years (±10.7). Six to 8 months post-PTCA self-reported symptom frequency (Z = 8.034, N-ties, P = .000) and duration decreased significantly (Z = 8.361, N-ties 20, P = .000) compared with pre-PTCA levels. Timeline scores increased significantly (Z = 3.46, N-ties 10, P = .001) indicating a shift in patients’ representations of their disease from an acute to a chronic model. Cure/control and consequence scores decreased significantly, indicating that representations regarding personal control over their illness weakened (Z = 3.251, N-ties 18, P = .001), as did their representation of their illness as having serious consequences (Z = 5.250, N-ties 0, P = .00).
sion
naccuracies in illness representations were evident, some of which evolved to more realistic representations, whereas others did not. In the era of promoting effective self-management among those living with chronic diseases a clear understanding of illness representation in the context of coronary heart disease is valuable, particularly as inaccuracies are associated with negative outcomes.
Journal title
Heart and Lung
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Heart and Lung
Record number
1858685
Link To Document