Published December 27, 2023 | Version online
Journal article Open

Knowledge and self-care practices and ‎skills regarding congestive heart failure and fluid and electrolytes balance ‎among patients suffering from it

  • 1. Professor of Medical-Surgical Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Dean of the Faculty of Nursing, Zagazig University, Egypt
  • 2. Professor and Head of Medical-Surgical Nursing Faculty of Nursing, Zagazig University, Egypt
  • 3. Assistant Professor of Medical-Surgical Nursing Faculty of Nursing, Zagazig University, Egypt
  • 4. M.Sc. Nursing, Zagazig University, Egypt

Description

Fluid and electrolyte imbalance in the patient with cardiovascular dysfunction is a common complication of cardiac disease. Cardiovascular diseases remain the number one cause of death i today. Recovery from these diseases requires careful attention to the factors that influence heart status. Fluid and electrolyte imbalance in the cardiac patient often is both life-threatening and preventable. Maintaining a homeostatic environment in terms of fluid and electrolyte balance is critical to achieving optimal cardiac function in all heart patients. Aim of study: to evaluate the effect of nursing intervention program on maintaining fluid and electrolyte balance among patients with congestive heart failure. Subjects and Methods: This quasi-experimental study was conducted in the outpatient clinics of the cardiology department at Zagazig University Hospitals on 60 patients suffering from CHF. The tools used in data collection were an interview questionnaire form for knowledge and observation checklists for practice, in addition to an input/output sheet. The researcher prepared the educational health promotion program, implemented it, and measured its immediate and 3-month follow-up effects. Results: Patients’ age ranged between 33 and 85 years, with 55.0% males. Patients’ knowledge improved from 3.3% pre-intervention to 81.7% post-intervention phase, and 75.0% at the follow-up (p<0.001). Their practices improved from 1.7% pre-intervention to 81.7% post-intervention, and 75.0% at follow-up (p<0.001). The prevalence of edema decreased from 73.3% pre-intervention to 26.7% at follow-up (p<0.001). In multivariate analysis, the study intervention was the main positive predictor of the knowledge and practice scores.

Files

IJCRM-2023-2-6-37.pdf

Files (647.4 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:37da47088cc344631a1c36cece882b6f
647.4 kB Preview Download

Additional details

References

  • Alqahtani AM. " Clean Hands, Safe Care: How Knowledge, Attitude, and Practice Impact Hand Hygiene Among Nurses in Najran, Saudi Arabia. Frontiers in Public Health. 2023 Jul 13;11:1158678. [Crossref]‎‎. PMID: 37521984; PMCID: PMC10372436
  • Asai K, Hatamochi C, Minamimura F. Association Between Illness Perception and Care-Seeking Intention in Patients With Chronic Heart Failure. Clinical nursing research. 2023 Mar;32(3):669-76. [Crossref] Epub 2022 Aug 8. PMID: 35934946
  • Banjade P, Kandel K, Itani A, Adhikari S, Basnet YM, Sharma M, Surani S. The interplay between obstructive sleep apnea, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and congestive heart failure: Time to collectively refer to them as triple overlap syndrome? Medicina. 2023 Jul 27;59(8):1374. [Crossref] PMID: 37629664; PMCID: PMC10456446
  • Belak L, Owens C, Smith M, Calloway E, Samnadda L, Egwuogu H, Schmidt S. The impact of medically tailored meals and nutrition therapy on biometric and dietary outcomes among food-insecure patients with congestive heart failure: a matched cohort study. BMC nutrition. 2022 Oct 3;8(1):108. doi: ‎‎10.1186/s40795-022-00602-y. PMID: 36192812; PMCID: PMC9528877
  • Bennet D, Khorsandian Y, Pelusi J, Mirabella A, Pirrotte P, Zenhausern F. Molecular and physical technologies for monitoring fluid and electrolyte imbalance: A focus on cancer population. Clinical and Translational Medicine. 2021 Jun;11(6):e461. doi: 10.1002/ctm2.461. PMID: 34185420; PMCID: PMC8214861