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Browsing by Author "Kouidi, Evangelia (56010483400)"

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    Psychometric validation of the short version of the Information Needs in Cardiac Rehabilitation scale through a first global assessment
    (2024)
    De Melo Ghisi, Gabriela Lima (59361815100)
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    Da Cruz, Mayara Moura Alves (57214469562)
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    Vanderlei, Luiz Carlos Marques (8766040800)
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    Liu, Xia (57206738971)
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    Xu, Zhimin (57705732200)
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    Jiandani, Mariya Prakash (57201735672)
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    Cuenza, Lucky (56502374800)
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    Kouidi, Evangelia (56010483400)
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    Giallauria, Francesco (6507763793)
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    Mohammed, Jibril (56575677500)
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    Maskhulia, Lela (14034191700)
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    Trevizan, Patricia Fernandes (35118162300)
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    Batalik, Ladislav (56491275900)
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    Pereira, Danielle Gomes (55419327100)
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    Tourkmani, Nidal (56603202500)
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    Burazor, Ivana (24767517700)
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    Venturini, Elio (13610066900)
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    Lira, Gerlene Grudka (57210959002)
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    Rehfeld, Manuella Bennaton Cardoso Vieira (59416789200)
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    Neves, Victor Ribeiro (37097600500)
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    Borges, Geovana de Jesus (59417446700)
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    Kim, Won-Seok (57028735900)
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    Cha, Seungwoo (57196322873)
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    Zhang, Ling (56487248100)
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    Grace, Sherry L. (7006091012)
    Aims: Tailored education is recommended for cardiac patients, yet little is known about information needs in areas of the world where it is most needed. This study aims to assess (i) the measurement properties of the Information Needs in Cardiac Rehabilitation short version (INCR-S) scale and (ii) patient's information needs globally. Methods and results: In this cross-sectional study, English, simplified Chinese, Portuguese, or Korean versions of the INCR-S were administered to in- or out-patients via Qualtrics (January 2022-November 2023). Members of the International Council of Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation community facilitated recruitment. Importance and knowledge sufficiency of 36 items were rated. Links to evidence-based lay education were provided where warranted. A total of 1601 patients from 19 middle- and high-income countries across the world participated. Structural validity was supported upon factor analysis, with five subscales extracted: symptom response/medication, heart diseases/diagnostic tests/treatments, exercise and return-to-life roles/programmes to support, risk factors, and healthy eating/psychosocial management. Cronbach's alpha was 0.97. Construct validity was supported through significantly higher knowledge sufficiency ratings for all items and information importance ratings for all subscales in cardiac rehabilitation (CR) enrolees vs. non-enrolees (all P < 0.001). All items were rated as very important - particularly regarding cardiac events, nutrition, exercise benefits, medications, symptom response, risk factor control, and CR - but more so in high-income countries in the Americas and Western Pacific. Knowledge sufficiency ranged from 30.0 to 67.4%, varying by region and income class. Ratings were highest for medications and lowest for support groups, resistance training, and alternative medicine. Conclusion: Identification of information needs using the valid and reliable INCR-S can inform educational approaches to optimize patients' health outcomes across the globe. © 2024 The Author(s).
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    Standards for the use of cardiopulmonary exercise testing for the functional evaluation of cardiac patients: A report from the Exercise Physiology Section of the European Association for Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation
    (2009)
    Mezzani, Alessandro (6701636877)
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    Agostoni, Piergiuseppe (7006061189)
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    Cohen-Solal, Alain (7101679104)
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    Corrà, Ugo (7003862757)
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    Jegier, Anna (6603259145)
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    Kouidi, Evangelia (56010483400)
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    Mazic, Sanja (6508115084)
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    Meurin, Philippe (6603856937)
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    Piepoli, Massimo (7005292730)
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    Simon, Attila (23006429700)
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    Laethem, Christophe Van (35113543900)
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    Vanhees, Luc (56998945000)
    Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is a methodology that has profoundly affected the approach to patients' functional evaluation, linking performance and physiological parameters to the underlying metabolic substratum and providing highly reproducible exercise capacity descriptors. This study provides professionals with an up-to-date review of the rationale sustaining the use of CPET for functional evaluation of cardiac patients in both the clinical and research settings, describing parameters obtainable either from ramp incremental or step constant-power CPET and illustrating the wealth of information obtainable through an experienced use of this powerful tool. The choice of parameters to be measured will depend on the specific goals of functional evaluation in the individual patient, namely, exercise tolerance assessment, training prescription, treatment efficacy evaluation, and/or investigation of exercise-induced adaptations of the oxygen transport/utilization system. The full potentialities of CPET in the clinical and research setting still remain largely underused and strong efforts are recommended to promote a more widespread use of CPET in the functional evaluation of cardiac patients. © 2009, European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.
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    Women's Cardiac Rehabilitation Barriers: Results of the International Council of Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation's First Global Assessment
    (2023)
    Ghisi, Gabriela Lima de Melo (36091244700)
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    Kim, Won-Seok (57028735900)
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    Cha, Seungwoo (57196322873)
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    Aljehani, Raghdah (57431746600)
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    Cruz, Mayara Moura Alves (57214469562)
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    Vanderlei, Luiz Carlos Marques (8766040800)
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    Pepera, Garyfallia (35318289900)
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    Liu, Xia (57206738971)
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    Xu, Zhimin (57705732200)
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    Maskhulia, Lela (14034191700)
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    Venturini, Elio (13610066900)
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    Chuang, Hung-Jui (57158706100)
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    Pereira, Danielle Gomes (55419327100)
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    Trevizan, Patricia Fernandes (35118162300)
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    Kouidi, Evangelia (56010483400)
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    Batalik, Ladislav (56491275900)
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    Ghanbari Firoozabadi, Mahdieh (56155327900)
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    Burazor, Ivana (24767517700)
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    Jiandani, Mariya Prakash (57201735672)
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    Zhang, Ling (56487248100)
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    Tourkmani, Nidal (56603202500)
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    Grace, Sherry L. (7006091012)
    Background: Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) programs are underutilized globally, especially by women. In this study we investigated sex differences in CR barriers across all world regions, to our knowledge for the first time, the characteristics associated with greater barriers in women, and women's greatest barriers according to enrollment status. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, the English, Simplified Chinese, Arabic, Portuguese, or Korean versions of the Cardiac Rehabilitation Barriers Scale was administered to CR-indicated patients globally via Qualtrics from October 2021 to March 2023. Members of the International Council of Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation community facilitated participant recruitment. Mitigation strategies were provided and rated. Results: Participants were 2163 patients from 16 countries across all 6 World Health Organization regions; 916 (42.3%) were women. Women did not report significantly greater total barriers overall, but did in 2 regions (Americas, Western Pacific) and men in 1 (Eastern Mediterranean; all P < 0.001). Women's barriers were greatest in the Western Pacific (2.6 ± 0.4/5) and South East Asian (2.5 ± 0.9) regions (P < 0.001), with lack of CR awareness as the greatest barrier in both. Women who were unemployed reported significantly greater barriers than those not (P < 0.001). Among nonenrolled referred women, the greatest barriers were not knowing about CR, not being contacted by the program, cost, and finding exercise tiring or painful. Among enrolled women, the greatest barriers to session adherence were distance, transportation, and family responsibilities. Mitigation strategies were rated as very helpful (4.2 ± 0.7/5). Conclusions: CR barriers—men's and women's—vary significantly according to region, necessitating tailored approaches to mitigation. Efforts should be made to mitigate unemployed women's barriers in particular. © 2023 The Authors

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