Background Patients with heart failure may experience poor quality of life due to a variety of physical and psychological symptoms. Quality of life can improve if patients adhere to consistent self-care behaviors. Patient outcomes (i.e., quality of life) are thought to improve as a result of caregiver contribution to self-care. However, uncertainty exists on whether these outcomes improve as a direct result of caregiver contribution to self-care or whether this improvement occurs indirectly through the improvement of patient heart failure self-care behaviors. Aims To investigate the influence of caregiver contribution to self-care on quality of life of heart failure people and explore whether patient self-care behaviors mediate such a relationship. Methods This is a secondary analysis of the MOTIVATE-HF randomized controlled trial (Clinicaltrials.gov registration number: NCT02894502). Data were collected at baseline and 3 months. An autoregressive longitudinal path analysis model was conducted to test our hypotheses. Results We enrolled a sample of 510 caregivers [mean age = 54 (+/- 15.44), 24% males)] and 510 patients [mean age = 72.4 (+/- 12.28), 58% males)]. Patient self-care had a significant and direct effect on quality of life at three months (beta = 0.20, p < .01). Caregiver contribution to self-care showed a significant direct effect on patient self-care (beta = 0.32, p < .01), and an indirect effect on patient quality of life through the mediation of patient self-care (beta = 0.07, p < .001). Conclusion Patient quality of life is influenced by self-care both directly and indirectly, through the mediation of caregiver contribution to self-care. These findings improve our understanding on how caregiver contribution to self-care improves patient outcomes.
The relationship between caregiver contribution to self-care and patient quality of life in heart failure: A longitudinal mediation analysis / Caggianelli, Gabriele; Alivernini, Fabio; Chirico, Andrea; Iovino, Paolo; Lucidi, Fabio; Uchmanowicz, Izabella; Rasero, Laura; Alvaro, Rosaria; Vellone, Ercole. - In: PLOS ONE. - ISSN 1932-6203. - ELETTRONICO. - 19:(2024), pp. e0300101.0-e0300101.0. [10.1371/journal.pone.0300101]
The relationship between caregiver contribution to self-care and patient quality of life in heart failure: A longitudinal mediation analysis
Iovino, Paolo;Rasero, Laura;Alvaro, Rosaria;
2024
Abstract
Background Patients with heart failure may experience poor quality of life due to a variety of physical and psychological symptoms. Quality of life can improve if patients adhere to consistent self-care behaviors. Patient outcomes (i.e., quality of life) are thought to improve as a result of caregiver contribution to self-care. However, uncertainty exists on whether these outcomes improve as a direct result of caregiver contribution to self-care or whether this improvement occurs indirectly through the improvement of patient heart failure self-care behaviors. Aims To investigate the influence of caregiver contribution to self-care on quality of life of heart failure people and explore whether patient self-care behaviors mediate such a relationship. Methods This is a secondary analysis of the MOTIVATE-HF randomized controlled trial (Clinicaltrials.gov registration number: NCT02894502). Data were collected at baseline and 3 months. An autoregressive longitudinal path analysis model was conducted to test our hypotheses. Results We enrolled a sample of 510 caregivers [mean age = 54 (+/- 15.44), 24% males)] and 510 patients [mean age = 72.4 (+/- 12.28), 58% males)]. Patient self-care had a significant and direct effect on quality of life at three months (beta = 0.20, p < .01). Caregiver contribution to self-care showed a significant direct effect on patient self-care (beta = 0.32, p < .01), and an indirect effect on patient quality of life through the mediation of patient self-care (beta = 0.07, p < .001). Conclusion Patient quality of life is influenced by self-care both directly and indirectly, through the mediation of caregiver contribution to self-care. These findings improve our understanding on how caregiver contribution to self-care improves patient outcomes.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
journal.pone.0300101.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipologia:
Pdf editoriale (Version of record)
Licenza:
Open Access
Dimensione
607.28 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
607.28 kB | Adobe PDF |
I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.