TY - JOUR
T1 - Associations between continuity of care, perceived control and self-care and their impact on health-related quality of life and hospital readmission—A structural equation model
AU - Säfström, Emma
AU - Årestedt, Kristofer
AU - Liljeroos, Maria
AU - Nordgren, Lena
AU - Jaarsma, Tiny
AU - Strömberg, Anna
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Advanced Nursing published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - Aim: The aim of this study is to examine whether a conceptual model including the associations between continuity of care, perceived control and self-care could explain variations in health-related quality of life and hospital readmissions in people with chronic cardiac conditions after hospital discharge. Design: Correlational design based on cross-sectional data from a multicentre survey study. Methods: People hospitalized due to angina, atrial fibrillation, heart failure or myocardial infarction were included at four hospitals using consecutive sampling procedures during 2017–2019. Eligible people received questionnaires by regular mail 4–6 weeks after discharge. A tentative conceptual model describing the relationship between continuity of care, self-care, perceived control, health-related quality of life and readmission was developed and evaluated using structural equation modelling. Results: In total, 542 people (mean age 75 years, 37% females) were included in the analyses. According to the structural equation model, continuity of care predicted self-care, which in turn predicted health-related quality of life and hospital readmission. The association between continuity of care and self-care was partly mediated by perceived control. The model had an excellent model fit: RMSEA = 0.06, 90% CI, 0.05–0.06; CFI = 0.90; TLI = 0.90. Conclusion: Interventions aiming to improve health-related quality of life and reduce hospital readmission rates should focus on enhancing continuity of care, perceived control and self-care. Impact: This study reduces the knowledge gap on how central factors after hospitalization, such as continuity of care, self-care and perceived control, are associated with improved health-related quality of life and hospital readmission in people with cardiac conditions. The results suggest that these factors together predicted the quality of life and readmissions in this sample. This knowledge is relevant to researchers when designing interventions or predicting health-related quality of life and hospital readmission. For clinicians, it emphasizes that enhancing continuity of care, perceived control and self-care positively impacts clinical outcomes. Patient or Public Contribution: People and healthcare personnel evaluated content validity and were included in selecting items for the short version.
AB - Aim: The aim of this study is to examine whether a conceptual model including the associations between continuity of care, perceived control and self-care could explain variations in health-related quality of life and hospital readmissions in people with chronic cardiac conditions after hospital discharge. Design: Correlational design based on cross-sectional data from a multicentre survey study. Methods: People hospitalized due to angina, atrial fibrillation, heart failure or myocardial infarction were included at four hospitals using consecutive sampling procedures during 2017–2019. Eligible people received questionnaires by regular mail 4–6 weeks after discharge. A tentative conceptual model describing the relationship between continuity of care, self-care, perceived control, health-related quality of life and readmission was developed and evaluated using structural equation modelling. Results: In total, 542 people (mean age 75 years, 37% females) were included in the analyses. According to the structural equation model, continuity of care predicted self-care, which in turn predicted health-related quality of life and hospital readmission. The association between continuity of care and self-care was partly mediated by perceived control. The model had an excellent model fit: RMSEA = 0.06, 90% CI, 0.05–0.06; CFI = 0.90; TLI = 0.90. Conclusion: Interventions aiming to improve health-related quality of life and reduce hospital readmission rates should focus on enhancing continuity of care, perceived control and self-care. Impact: This study reduces the knowledge gap on how central factors after hospitalization, such as continuity of care, self-care and perceived control, are associated with improved health-related quality of life and hospital readmission in people with cardiac conditions. The results suggest that these factors together predicted the quality of life and readmissions in this sample. This knowledge is relevant to researchers when designing interventions or predicting health-related quality of life and hospital readmission. For clinicians, it emphasizes that enhancing continuity of care, perceived control and self-care positively impacts clinical outcomes. Patient or Public Contribution: People and healthcare personnel evaluated content validity and were included in selecting items for the short version.
KW - adult nursing chronic illness
KW - conceptual models of nursing
KW - discharge planning
KW - older people
KW - quality of life
KW - self-care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85147508370&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/jan.15581
DO - 10.1111/jan.15581
M3 - Article
C2 - 36744677
AN - SCOPUS:85147508370
SN - 0309-2402
VL - 79
SP - 2305
EP - 2315
JO - Journal of Advanced Nursing
JF - Journal of Advanced Nursing
IS - 6
ER -