Patients with cardiovascular conditions eligible for or participating in cardiac rehabilitation
Digital technologies and telehealth programs in cardiac rehabilitation
This AHA science advisory outlines the potential of digital technologies to augment traditional cardiac rehabilitation, providing guidance for implementation, research, and promoting health equity.
Cardiac rehabilitation has strong evidence of benefit across many cardiovascular conditions but is underused. Even for those patients who participate in cardiac rehabilitation, there is the potential to better support them in improving behaviors known to promote optimal cardiovascular health and in sustaining those behaviors over time. Digital technology has the potential to address many of the challenges of traditional center-based cardiac rehabilitation and to augment care delivery. This American Heart Association science advisory was assembled to guide the development and implementation of digital cardiac rehabilitation interventions that can be translated effectively into clinical care, improve health outcomes, and promote health equity. This advisory thus describes the individual digital components that can be delivered in isolation or as part of a larger cardiac rehabilitation telehealth program and highlights challenges and future directions for digital technology generally and when used in cardiac rehabilitation specifically. It is also intended to provide guidance to researchers reporting digital interventions and clinicians implementing these interventions in practice and to advance a framework for equity-centered digital health in cardiac rehabilitation.
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Jessica R. Golbus
Heart Failure & Transplant
Francisco López-Jiménez
Preventive Cardiology
Ana Barac
Cardio-Oncology
Circulation
Hospital Universitario Fundación Jiménez Díaz
Danieli (Italy)
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Golbus et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a00cfb1b124fe5819861174 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/cir.0000000000001150