Abstract P049: A Digital Therapeutic Intervention Is Feasible For Outpatient Care In Coronary Artery Disease

Introduction: Lifestyle and medication adherence are important factors in secondary coronary artery disease (CAD)-prevention. Furthermore, the mind-heart-body connection is gaining recognition in cardiovascular health management. Hypothesis: We assessed the hypothesis that a CAD-specific digital int...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Circulation
Main Authors: Arnar, David O, Oddsson, Saemundur, Gunnarsdottir, Thrudur, Olafsdottir, Inga V, Gudmundsdottir, Maria V, Loftsson, Kjartan H, Gudmundsson, Elias F, Kaernested, Bylgja, Amundadottir, Maria L, Sigurdardottir, Svala, Mogensen, Brynjolfur, Libungan, Berglind, Thorgeirsson, Tryggvi
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health) 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/circ.145.suppl_1.p049
Description
Summary:Introduction: Lifestyle and medication adherence are important factors in secondary coronary artery disease (CAD)-prevention. Furthermore, the mind-heart-body connection is gaining recognition in cardiovascular health management. Hypothesis: We assessed the hypothesis that a CAD-specific digital intervention is feasible for outpatient care in terms of program retention, satisfaction, quality of life, symptom frequency and medication adherence. Methods: A four-week CAD-program (SK-121) delivered via a smart phone was designed in collaboration between the National University Hospital of Iceland (NUHI) and Sidekick Health. Patient recruitment took place at NUHI, and program participation consisted of daily health promoting missions assigned within the digital intervention such as watching educational videos, mindfulness exercises, medication reminders and logging quality of life scores. Pre- and post-intervention questionnaires were administered for the Hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS), Seattle Angina Questionnaire-7 (SAQ-7) and the Morisky medication adherence scale (MMAS-8). Stress-, energy-levels and quality of sleep were logged on a ten-point scale. Participants were interviewed about their program experience. Results: A total of 33 individuals signed informed consent and completed the baseline survey, of which 25 individuals registered in the app (76% males, mean age 60 years [SD=10]). A total of 23 participants logged a mission during the 4-week intervention, five of those were active a single day. A total of 16 (70%) participants completed the program and both pre- and post-surveys (mean age 60 years [SD=10], range 44-80 years). On average participants logged 7.5 missions/day (10.2 for women and 6.6 for men), completing half of daily missions (women 71%, men 47%). Results for average quality of life scores from week one to four were: for energy 5.5[SD=1.8] to 5.8[SD=1.9], p =0.22, for quality of sleep 6.2[SD=2.5] to 5.9[SD=2.4] p =0.20 and for stress 3.3[SD=2.6] to 3.3[SD=2.4] p =0.71.The ...