Journal of Scientific Research Writing, Spring 2025

Determining the best methods of Health Education for Cardiovascular Health Disease


Novi, MI
Published: August 28, 2024
Peer-Reviewed

Determining the best methods of Health Education for Coronary Heart Disease - Gowtham Kantamneni.docx

ABSTRACT

Background

Coronary heart disease (CHD) has increased over the last twenty years. Previous studies show
that health education may have a role in exacerbating this epidemic. This study aims to find the
best ways to help alleviate the inequality regarding CHD between educated and less educated
individuals.

Methods

Google Scholar was searched using the key search terms coronary disease and education to
identify three articles to be reviewed. They focused on education and CHD, studies written in
English, and published within the last 15 years and excluded studies with a population of
children under the age of 18 or study design of a literature review

Results

Nearly 42% of patients with CHD reported gaps in their cardiology care, primarily at the
transition age of 19.9 years, while only 8% of patients with severe CHD experienced such gaps.
Individuals with less exposure to health education had higher total cholesterol, systolic blood
pressure, and smoking intensity, leading to a 6.8% increased cumulative risk of CHD in men and
6.2% in women by age 75, with 9334 CHD or stroke events occurring during an 11.5-year
follow-up.

Discussion

Health education decisively plays a key role in the onset of CHD. Teaching self-care to patients,
particularly in young adults is a potential method to incorporate to help lessen the inequalities
elicited by education.

INTRODUCTION

Coronary heart disease (CHD) has become the single most common cause of death globally [1].
The average lifespan of an individual with CHD is 62 years of age [2]. Although this study
confirmed that leading a healthy life is mostly achievable until the late stages of life due to
advances in healthcare, we cannot overlook the overall impact of health education on lifespan
which is still a primary concern [2]. In just the ten years from 2000 to 2010, there has been a
55% increase in adults with CHD, further emphasizing the urgency of the issue [3].

A lifestyle consisting of frequent exercise, a healthy diet, and free of smoking is pivotal for a
heart that is devoid of CHD [4]. Unfortunately, adults who have less health education are less
likely to follow the habits listed above, and as such, are more likely to expose themselves to a
higher risk of developing CHD [5]. Studying the causes of the differences between uneducated
individuals can help clarify what makes them more exposed to this condition and help decrease
the prevalence of CHD as a whole by lessening its impact on one of its largest targets. The
purpose of this paper is to determine methods for alleviating the inequality elicited by differences
in health education between individuals by measuring their quantitative effectiveness on patients.

METHODS

I used Google Scholar to identify research papers using the key terms coronary disease and
education. I chose an inclusion criteria of studies written in English and published in the past 15
years. Studies with participants under the age of 18 were excluded as were other literature
reviews.

RESULTS

Importance of Self-Care

Patients with heart failure have shown a great increase in their self-care behavior from being educated and supported by a nurse in the hospital and home setting [8]. Self-care behavior was increased in patients from both the intervention and control groups within 1 month of discharge, but the increase in the intervention group was significantly more after 1 month [8]. Self-care behavior in both groups decreased over the next 8 months, but the increase from baseline remained statistically significant in the intervention group only, not in the control group [8]. The intervention had no significant effects on resource use [8].

At Risk Uneducated Age Groups

Of patients with CHD, 42% reported gaps in their cardiology care [9]. This number was also much lower at just 8% for patients with severe CHD [9]. The most telling result was that the typical age for gaps in care occurred during the transition from adolescence to adulthood with a mean age of 19.9 [9]. 

Most pivotal risk factors by education level

At baseline, less educated individuals had higher mean levels of total cholesterol and systolic blood pressure, were more likely to be current smokers, under antihypertensive treatment, and obese (p-values < 0.05) [10]. Additionally, less educated women had lower HDL cholesterol and a higher prevalence of diabetes, with smoking intensity increasing as education decreased, particularly among women [10]. During a median follow-up of 11.5 years, 9334 incident coronary heart disease (CHD) or stroke events and 7020 non-CVD deaths occurred [10]. Low education was significantly associated with an increased cumulative risk of CHD (p-value < 0.0001 for both genders) and stroke (p-values 0.003 in men, 0.001 in women), with an absolute difference in CVD risk by age 75 of 6.8% in men and 6.2% in women [10]. Additive interaction analysis revealed that smoking increased the cumulative risk of CVD by 3.1% in less-educated men and 1.5% in less-educated women, while obesity was associated with a lower cumulative risk in less-educated men [10].

The cumulative risk of CHD or stroke, above all else, is greater the lower your education level, holding all extraneous variables equivalent [10]. 

DISCUSSION

Relation between CHD and Education

A study examining health education’s relationship with CHD confirmed that education impacts
CHD levels even amongst individuals with similar habits and lifestyles [10]. As such, there is a
need to quell disparities brought about by education.

Methods to consider to aid in the combat of CHD

With regards to specific methods of helping uneducated individuals with CHD, focusing on
teaching self care to patients has been shown to decrease hospital visits as well as prolonged
increase in self-care habits [8]. In essence, taking the time to teach patients how to properly care
for themselves increases their likelihood of following these habits and leading a healthier life
after discharge. The teaching resonated with patients, improving their self-care habits for many
months more than the control groups. As teaching self-care led to a smaller readmission rate to
hospitals, teaching self-care can save time and money for hospitals, while allowing patients to
maintain a healthier life.

In a study which looked at the prevalence in “gaps” in cardiology care, which are essentially
points at which patients are not administering proper care for their respective conditions, gaps
were substantially more prevalent in young adults with a mean age of 20 [9]. This means that
young adults with CHD are the least likely to properly care for themselves and should be
targeted by educational interventions. Although these ages may have a smaller prevalence of
CHD than older individuals, lessons learned at this age have been shown to hold true throughout
much of adulthood, meaning addressing these ages could not only benefit the most
disadvantaged age group, but also improve their CHD care in the future.
Based on the findings, we can conclude that the best way of alleviating health education
shortcomings is to teach self-care to patients who are transitioning from adolescence to
adulthood, around the age of 20.

References

  1. Anderson, L., Brown, J. P., Clark, A. M., Dalal, H., Rossau, H. K. K., Bridges, C., &amp;
    Taylor, R. S. (2017). Patient education in the management of coronary heart disease.
    Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, (6).
  2. Castelli, W. P. (1984). Epidemiology of coronary heart disease: the Framingham study.
    The American journal of medicine, 76(2), 4-12.
  3. Marelli, A. J., Ionescu-Ittu, R., Mackie, A. S., Guo, L., Dendukuri, N., &amp; Kaouache, M.
    (2014). Lifetime prevalence of congenital heart disease in the general population from
    2000 to 2010. Circulation, 130(9), 749-756.
  4. Puddu, P. E., &amp; Menotti, A. (2015). The impact of basic lifestyle behaviour on health:
    How to lower the risk of coronary heart disease, other cardiovascular diseases, cancer and
    all-cause mortality. E-Journal of Cardiology Practice, 13(32).
  5. Jacobsen, B. K., &amp; Thelle, D. S. (1988). Risk factors for coronary heart disease and level
    of education: The Tromsø Heart Study. American Journal of Epidemiology, 127(5), 923-
    932.
  6. Bambra, C. (2016). Health divides: where you live can kill you. Policy Press.
  7. Nietzel, M. T. (2024b, February 20). Percentage of U.S. adults with college degree or
    postsecondary credential reaches new high, according to Lumina report. Forbes.
  8. Jaarsma, T., Halfens, R., Huijer Abu-Saad, H., Dracup, K., Gorgels, T., Van Ree, J., &amp;
    Stappers, J. (1999). Effects of education and support on self-care and resource utilization
    in patients with heart failure. European heart journal, 20(9), 673-682.
  9. Gurvitz, M., Valente, A. M., Broberg, C., Cook, S., Stout, K., Kay, J., … &amp; Alliance for
    Adult Research in Congenital Cardiology (AARCC) and Adult Congenital Heart
    Association. (2013). Prevalence and predictors of gaps in care among adult congenital
    heart disease patients: HEART-ACHD (The Health, Education, and Access Research
    Trial). Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 61(21), 2180-2184.
  10. Veronesi, G., Tunstall-Pedoe, H., Ferrario, M. M., Kee, F., Kuulasmaa, K., Chambless, L.
    E., … &amp; MORGAM Project. (2017). Combined effect of educational status and
    cardiovascular risk factors on the incidence of coronary heart disease and stroke in
    European cohorts: implications for prevention. European journal of preventive
    cardiology, 24(4), 437-445.
  11. Silventoinen, K., Pankow, J., Jousilahti, P., Hu, G., &amp; Tuomilehto, J. (2005). Educational
    inequalities in the metabolic syndrome and coronary heart disease among middle-aged
    men and women. International Journal of Epidemiology, 34(2), 327-334.
  12. Healthy habits begin in childhood – Nebraska Department of Education. (n.d.).
    https://www.education.ne.gov/ns/cacfp/foodnutrition/healthy-habits-begin-in-childhood/
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