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    Cardiac Rehabilitation Availability and Density around the Globe.

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    ECLINM global availability and density.pdf (1.478Mb)
    Date
    2019-08-01
    Author
    Turk-Adawi, Karam
    Supervia, Marta
    Lopez-Jimenez, Francisco
    Pesah, Ella
    Ding, Rongjing
    Britto, Raquel R
    Bjarnason-Wehrens, Birna
    Derman, Wayne
    Abreu, Ana
    Babu, Abraham S
    Santos, Claudia Anchique
    Jong, Seng Khiong
    Cuenza, Lucky
    Yeo, Tee Joo
    Scantlebury, Dawn
    Andersen, Karl
    Gonzalez, Graciela
    Giga, Vojislav
    Vulic, Dusko
    Vataman, Eleonora
    Cliff, Jacqueline
    Kouidi, Evangelia
    Yagci, Ilker
    Kim, Chul
    Benaim, Briseida
    Estany, Eduardo Rivas
    Fernandez, Rosalia
    Radi, Basuni
    Gaita, Dan
    Simon, Attila
    Chen, Ssu-Yuan
    Roxburgh, Brendon
    Martin, Juan Castillo
    Maskhulia, Lela
    Burdiat, Gerard
    Salmon, Richard
    Lomelí, Hermes
    Sadeghi, Masoumeh
    Sovova, Eliska
    Hautala, Arto
    Tamuleviciute-Prasciene, Egle
    Ambrosetti, Marco
    Neubeck, Lis
    Asher, Elad
    Kemps, Hareld
    Eysymontt, Zbigniew
    Farsky, Stefan
    Hayward, Jo
    Prescott, Eva
    Dawkes, Susan
    Santibanez, Claudio
    Zeballos, Cecilia
    Pavy, Bruno
    Kiessling, Anna
    Sarrafzadegan, Nizal
    Baer, Carolyn
    Thomas, Randal
    Hu, Dayi
    Grace, Sherry L
    ...show more authors ...show less authors
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    Abstract
    Despite the epidemic of cardiovascular disease and the benefits of cardiac rehabilitation (CR), availability is known to be insufficient, although this is not quantified. This study ascertained CR availability, volumes and its drivers, and density. A survey was administered to CR programs globally. Cardiac associations and local champions facilitated program identification. Factors associated with volumes were assessed using generalized linear mixed models, and compared by World Health Organization region. Density (i.e. annual ischemic heart disease [IHD] incidence estimate from Global Burden of Disease study divided by national CR capacity) was computed. CR was available in 111/203 (54.7%) countries; data were collected in 93 (83.8% country response; N = 1082 surveys, 32.1% program response rate). Availability by region ranged from 80.7% of countries in Europe, to 17.0% in Africa (p < .001). There were 5753 programs globally that could serve 1,655,083 patients/year, despite an estimated 20,279,651 incident IHD cases globally/year. Volume was significantly greater where patients were systematically referred (odds ratio [OR] = 1.36, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.35-1.38) and programs offered alternative models (OR = 1.05, 95%CI = 1.04-1.06), and significantly lower with private (OR = .92, 95%CI = .91-.93) or public (OR = .83, 95%CI = .82-84) funding compared to hybrid sources.Median capacity (i.e., number of patients a program serve annually) was 246/program (Q25-Q75 = 150-390). The absolute density was one CR spot per 11 IHD cases in countries with CR, and 12 globally. CR is available in only half of countries globally. Where offered, capacity is grossly insufficient, such that most patients will not derive the benefits associated with participation.
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2019.06.007
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/12006
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