A randomised controlled trial of a self-management plan for patients with newly diagnosed angina.
- 1 March 2002
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Vol. 52 (476) , 194-6, 199
Abstract
There are approximately 1.8 million patients with angina in the United Kingdom, many of whom report a poor quality of life, including raised levels of anxiety and depression. To evaluate the effect of a cognitive behavioural disease management programme, the Angina Plan, on psychological adjustment in patients newly diagnosed with angina pectoris. Randomised controlled trial. Patients from GP practices in a Northern UK city (York) between April 1999 and May 2000. Recruited patients were randomised to receive the Angina Plan or to a routine, practice nurse-led secondary prevention educational session. Twenty of the 25 practices invited to join the study supplied patients' names; 142 patients attended an assessment clinic and were randomised There were no significant differences in any baseline measures. At the six month post-treatment follow-up, 130 (91%) patients were reassessed. When compared with the educational session patients (using analysis of covariance adjusted for baseline scores in an intention-to-treat analysis) Angina Plan patients showed a greater reduction in anxiety (P = 0.05) and depression (P = 0.01), the frequency of angina (reduced by three episodes per week, versus a reduction of 0.4 per week, P = 0.016) the use of glyceryl trinitrate (reduced by 4.19 fewer doses per week versus a reduction of 0.59 per week, P = 0.018), and physical limitations (P<0.001: Seattle Angina Questionnaire). They were also more likely to report having changed their diet (41 versus 21, P<0.001) and increased their daily walking (30 versus 2, P<0.001). There was no significant difference between the groups on the other sub-scales of the Seattle Angina Questionnaire or in any of the medical variables measured. The Angina Plan appears to improve the psychological, symptomatic, and functional status of patients newly diagnosed with angina.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
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