Lower cardiac self-efficacy predicted subsequent heart failure hospitalization (OR 1.4 per SD decrease, p=0.0006) and all-cause mortality (OR 1.4, p<0.0001) in patients with stable CHD.
Cohort (n=1,024)
Effect estimate: OR 1.4
p-value: p=0.0006 (HF), <0.0001 (mortality)
OBJECTIVE: The authors sought to evaluate the association of self-efficacy with objective measures of cardiac function, subsequent hospitalization for heart failure (HF), and all-cause mortality. DESIGN: Observational cohort of ambulatory patients with stable CHD. The authors measured self-efficacy using a published, validated, 5-item summative scale, the Sullivan Self-Efficacy to Maintain Function Scale. The authors also performed a cardiac assessment, including an exercise treadmill test with stress echocardiography. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Hospitalizations for HF, as determined by blinded review of medical records, and all-cause mortality, with adjustment for demographics, medical history, medication use, depressive symptoms, and social support. RESULTS: Of the 1,024 predominately male, older CHD patients, 1013 (99%) were available for follow-up, 124 (12%) were hospitalized for HF, and 235 (23%) died during 4.3 years of follow-up. Mean cardiac self-efficacy score was 9.7 (SD 4.5, range 0-20), corresponding to responses between "not at all confident" and "somewhat confident" for ability to maintain function. Lower self-efficacy predicted subsequent HF hospitalization (OR per SD decrease = 1.4, p = .0006), and all-cause mortality (OR per SD decrease = 1.4, p < .0001). After adjustment, the association of cardiac self-efficacy with both HF hospitalization and mortality was explained by worse baseline cardiac function. CONCLUSION: Among patients with CHD, self-efficacy was a reasonable proxy for predicting HF hospitalizations. The increased risk of HF associated with lower baseline self-efficacy was explained by worse cardiac function. These findings indicate that measuring cardiac self-efficacy provides a rapid and potentially useful assessment of cardiac function among outpatients with CHD.
Sarkar et al. (Thu,) conducted a cohort in Stable coronary heart disease (n=1,024). Self-efficacy was evaluated on Hospitalizations for heart failure and all-cause mortality (OR 1.4, p=0.0006 (HF), <0.0001 (mortality)). Lower cardiac self-efficacy predicted subsequent heart failure hospitalization (OR 1.4 per SD decrease, p=0.0006) and all-cause mortality (OR 1.4, p<0.0001) in patients with stable CHD.