हमारा समूह 1000 से अधिक वैज्ञानिक सोसायटी के सहयोग से हर साल संयुक्त राज्य अमेरिका, यूरोप और एशिया में 3000+ वैश्विक सम्मेलन श्रृंखला कार्यक्रम आयोजित करता है और 700+ ओपन एक्सेस जर्नल प्रकाशित करता है जिसमें 50000 से अधिक प्रतिष्ठित व्यक्तित्व, प्रतिष्ठित वैज्ञानिक संपादकीय बोर्ड के सदस्यों के रूप में शामिल होते हैं।
ओपन एक्सेस जर्नल्स को अधिक पाठक और उद्धरण मिल रहे हैं
700 जर्नल और 15,000,000 पाठक प्रत्येक जर्नल को 25,000+ पाठक मिल रहे हैं
Darby J. Winkler, Kameron B. Suire, Jan. Kavookjian, Danielle D. Wadsworth
Objectives: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death globally but can be prevented and treated with lifestyle modifications or health behavior changes. A modified Cochrane method of systematic review was implemented to explore and report evidence and gaps in the literature for studies of motivational interviewing (MI) influence on outpatient cardiac rehabilitation (OPCR) patient outcomes.
Methods: The literature search was conducted using several databases (Medline, Academic Search Premier, Psych Info, PubMed, Sport Discus, Science Direct, CINAHL, Web of Science, APA Psych Articles, Complementary Index, Education Research Complete, Health Source, and Directory Open Access Journals) with a combination of the search terms, ‘cardiac rehab’ and ‘motivational interviewing’. Inclusion criteria included studies that used MI as part of an intervention, conducted in the OPCR setting, randomized control trials (RCT), results for behavioral, psychosocial/humanistic, and/or clinical outcomes were reported, and written in English. Search/review tiers included titles/abstracts and full text.
Results: Of the 398 studies from the initial search, nine RCTs met the criteria and were retained for this review. Of the 9 studies, 7 reported a significant difference in at least one behavioral, psychological/humanistic, and/or clinical outcome such as OPCR attendance, anxiety or depressive symptoms scores, cholesterol values, and/or blood pressure.
Conclusion: MI demonstrated a positive effect on behavioral, psychosocial, humanistic, or clinical outcomes. Heterogeneity in study designs, measures, and outcomes suggest that further research is warranted to elucidate optimal intervention structure in terms of contact frequency and study duration.