International experts publish guidelines for cardiac rehab in developing countries

Life-saving cardiac rehab programs are not being offered in countries where heart disease is the biggest killer. A panel of experts has now released a statement recommending how all the key elements of these programs can be delivered in an affordable way, in the places where it is needed most.

"All heart patients should be referred to cardiac rehab," says York U Professor Sherry Grace. "We see in like India and China, young cardiac patients die at incredible rates. This is because so few programs are set up in these developing countries."

Cardiac rehabilitation is an outpatient chronic disease management , proven to reduce death by over 25 per cent and hospitalization by almost 20 per cent.

Grace led the panel convened through the International Council of Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation that has released a statement including recommendations on how all of the key elements of cardiac rehab programs can be delivered at a low cost.

The cardiac rehab model of care is quite standard in developed countries, and consists of risk factor assessment and management, exercise training, patient education, as well as dietary and psychosocial counselling. While it is cost-effective to deliver these programs in countries such as Canada, the United Kingdom and United States, the situation in developing countries is different.

"We needed to provide direction on how to deliver all these components in an affordable, but effective way," says Dr. Paul Oh, co-author and medical director of Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation Program at Toronto Rehabilitation Institute-University Health Network (UHN).

Working together, experts from China, India, Iran, Singapore, South Africa, the Middle East and South America have published the Consensus Statement that includes specific recommendations for delivering each component, drawing from effective programs in developed countries and also from their own expertise.

"Health workers who are not medical doctors can play a key role in providing to cardiac patients," says co-author Dr. Aashish Contractor, who heads Rehabilitation and Sports Medicine department at Sir H.N. Reliance Foundation Hospital in Mumbai, India. "A community health-care worker or nurse can educate and guide patients on making lifestyle changes at a lower-cost than a doctor, and there are just too few doctors in these countries".

In the statement titled "Cardiac rehabilitation delivery model for low-resource settings, published in the journal Heart , they also recommend that programs not be delivered in expensive medical settings like hospitals, but in the community. New technologies should also be exploited, because the penetration of mobile phones in these countries is very high.

Grace, who is also a Senior Scientist at Toronto Rehabilitation Institute-UHN, adds that plans are underway to test the model and its cost in various countries. "Then we can advocate for more cardiac rehab delivery, and refine how we deliver it. We see new cardiac care units going up in these countries; the wealthy receive high-tech interventions like stents and surgery, but the average heart patient is not able to get the low-tech basics that work well in ."

Journal information: Heart
Provided by York University
Citation: International experts publish guidelines for cardiac rehab in developing countries (2016, May 16) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2016-05-international-experts-publish-guidelines-cardiac.html
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