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WALK IN THE COMMUNITY a Community Partnership Cardiac Rehabilitation Program co-organized by Cardiac Rehabilitation and Resource Center Tung Wah Eastern Hospital and Care for Your Heart.
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WALK IN THE COMMUNITY a Community Partnership Cardiac Rehabilitation Programco-organized byCardiac Rehabilitation and Resource CenterTung Wah Eastern Hospital andCare for Your Heart Dr. Leung Kei Pui Deputy Hospital Chief ExecutiveChief of Service (Medicine and Rehabilitation) Tung Wah Eastern Hospital23rd September, 2006
Introduction • Exercise-based rehabilitation for coronary heart disease shown to decrease all cause mortality by 27% and total cardiac mortality by 31% (Cochrane Review 2003) • Even in PCI era, exercise training shown to lower significantly the event rate and hospital readmission rate in addition to the improvement of functional capacity and QOL ( ETICA Trial 2001)
Introduction • Many cardiac patients claimed to be engaged in physical activities • Whether such physical activities can achieve exercise intensity levels sufficient to improve aerobic fitness or slow progression of CAD is unknown
Introduction • The recommended exercise goal for secondary prevention is 30 to 60 min of moderate-intensity aerobic activity, such as brisk walking in most, preferably all, days of the week (AHA/ACC Joint Guideline 2006 Update)
Objectives • To determine self-selected exercise intensity of cardiac patients who reported walking as their most frequent form of exercise • To examine whether a community walking class can improve the percentage of patients to exercise at the target heart rate training zone
Methods • A collaboration program between TWEH and Care for Your Heart Training sessions Community cardiac pts n= 24 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 TWEH, RH completed phase II CRP > 6 months n= 41 Field test Field test Exercise prescription Completed 8 sessions of CWC, n= 40 Continue exercise in CWC, n= 25 All patients said to be actively exercising in community
Runner Check-point 2 • Field Test: • Polar was used to monitor HR • Walk at their self-selected (usual) pace • Walking path : 600m per lap • HR taken in 2 check points at each lap • 8 lap walking (40 - 60 min) (excluded warm up & stretching exercise) • HRs were averaged and intensity were calculated as metabolic equivalents (METs) Check-point 1
Exercise Test • No previous cardiac rehab (n= 12) Symptom-limited exercise test to determine maximum heart rate (HRmax) • Had previous cardiac rehab (n= 28) HRmax at post-program exercise test was taken as reference
Calculation of heart rate training zone Target HR range = ([HRmax – HRrest] x % intensity) + HRrest Example: HRmax 140 / min, HRrest 70 / min Intensity 40% to 80% Target HR range = ([140 – 70] x 40% - 80%) + 70 = (28 – 56) + 70 = 98 / min – 126 / min
Individualized Exercise Prescription Pre-Walking Class Briefing Patients know • Training HR zone • How to monitor the HR • How to titrate the exercise intensity • How fast they should walk • Take precautions (eg, adequate hydration, emergency response)
Results Demographic data for completed cases, n= 40 Sessions 8 Total Number of Attendance 320 Averaged Age of the Patients 62.8 ± 10.7 Gender : Male 63% Diagnosis: CAD 32 (PCI 25, CABG 3) Post valvular replacement 2 CHF 6
n= 40 Field Test
Percentage of Subjects of which the Exercise Heart Rate is within the Recommended Target Exercise HR Training Zone Percentage of subjects (%) P<0.001
n= 40 Field Test
Averaged Exercise Intensity (METs) before and after the Community Walking Class 4.0 ± 0.8 3.3 ± 0.8 p < 0.001
Percentage of subjects who were able to establish a regular exercise habit in the community Percentage of subjects (%) p < 0.001
Discussion • Recent epidemiological studies shown that each 1-MET increase in exercise capacity confers 8% to 17% reduction in cardiovascular and all cause mortality • The exercise intensity of our patient study group was 3.3 METs in average, which is at the lower end of the recommended intensity of 3- to 6- METs, and less than ¼ could exercise within the target HR training zone
Discussion • Even for patients who had undergone CRP training and continued to exercise in the community, they frequently could not maintain the exercise intensity achieved during the rehabilitation • Community maintenance program might be helpful to keep them exercising at adequate intensity to maintain health benefits
Discussion Benefits of walking class • Walking is the most-preferred mode of exercise • Large scale participation, accommodates 50 to 100 clients, if suitable area is available • An enjoyable event and in a healthy environment • Could intake patients with CHD in lower risk (exercise capacity >8 METs or uncomplicated MI) • Decrease resources use compared with formal CRP hospital-based program
Conclusion • Many cardiac patients failed to attain the recommended target exercise heart rate while walking at their self-selected paces • A community walking program that partnered with community organisations could increase the exercise intensity which might be associated with better health outcomes
Acknowledgement Cardiac Rehabilitation and Resource Center, Tung Wah Eastern Hospital Dr. LEUNG Kei Pui Deputy Hospital Chief Executive Chief of Service (Department of Medicine and Rehabilitation) Tung Wah Eastern Hospital Ms TANG Siu Wai Nurse Specialist Department of Medicine and Rehabiliataion, Cardiac Rehabilitation and Resource Center, Tung Wah Eastern Hospital Mr. CHAN Kin Ming Clement Physiotherapist Department of Physiotherapy, Cardiac Rehabilitation and Resources Center, Tung Wah Eastern Hospital Care for Your Heart Ms. HUI Yuen Ting, Cat Exeuctive Sectetary, Registered Social Worker Care for Your Heart
Looking forward for Further Collaborations with more Community Partners - Thank You -