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The Heart Truth Educational Slide Module: Behavioral aspects

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Title: The Heart Truth Educational Slide Module: Behavioral aspects


1
Cardiovascular Disease in WomenModule VIII
Behavioral Aspects for CVD Prevention in Women
2
This presentation is specifically designed to
assist Primary Care Providers in helping their
patients TAKE HOME TAKE TO HEART THE HEART
TRUTH
3
The following issues will be discussed
What to Change Most of the Heart Truth
lifestyle interventions involve a need for
behavioral change. This change involves both the
provider and the patient. Strategy for Change
For Heart Truth lifestyle interventions to be
effective they require a strategy that entails
counseling for behavioral change and seeking the
patients commitment to such change.
4
Also to be discussed
Clinical Impact It is extremely important that
the provider determines on an ongoing basis the
overall progress of the patient relative to the
effectiveness of the provider-patient
relationship in terms of achieving behavioral
modification and reaching Heart Truth clinical
measures and benchmarks
5
What to Change
Adverse Behaviors
  • Most of the Heart Truth lifestyle interventions
    deal with adverse behaviors
  • Cigarette smoking
  • Deficient physical activity
  • Deficient dietary plan
  • Deficient weight maintenance or reduction

Sources Mosca 2007
6
What to Change
Level of Participation
  • Effective health care in general is an active
    phenomenon that requires the active participation
    of the patient and provider in order for positive
    outcomes to be achieved
  • The degree of behavioral modification achieved is
    aggregate evidence of the effectiveness of this
    active participation

Sources Prochaska 1992, Zimmerman 2000
7
What to Change
Provider Obstacles
  • Some providers have doubts about their patients
    ability to change
  • Some providers doubt that behavioral change will
    have any real impact on health outcomes of their
    patients

8
What to Change
Provider Obstacles
  • Some providers have difficulty finding the time
    they think they need to become a change agent for
    their patient
  • Some providers fear that they do not know what to
    do even if they wanted to help due to lack of
    training in this area

9
What to Change
Provider Obstacles
  • Having a specific strategy to address change
    saves time and alleviates the providers fear of
    the unknown
  • These provider-specific obstacles must be removed
    or the provider should refer the patient to
    another provider, in the best interests of the
    patient

10
Strategy for Change
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assess (or Ask)
  • Advise
  • Agree
  • Assist
  • Arrange

The 5-As
Sources Whitlock 2003
11
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assess (or Ask about) risk factors, beliefs,
    behavior, and knowledge about a lifestyle
    intervention
  • Assess whether she is willing to initiate steps
    towards modifying her behavior in the direction
    of the Heart Truth objectives
  • Assess knowledge, skills, confidence, conviction,
    supports, and barriers
  • Provide feedback to her about assessment

12
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assess importance with good questions.
  • How important do you think it is to change this
    targeted behavior?
  • On a scale of 1 to 10 with 1 being not
    convinced at all to 10 being totally
    convinced, how important is it to you?
  • What makes you say 3, why not 0?
  • What would it take to move it to a 6?

13
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assess what or who is important
  • What or Who is important or of value to you?
  • What would they do without you or what would
    they do if you became disabled from a
    complication of heart disease?
  • Use the answer to these questions as leverage in
    your dialogue about the importance of changing
    targeted behavior

14
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Advise with a clear personalized message
  • Expound on the dangers that are specific to her
    in relationship to the targeted behavior
  • Advise her about the benefits of change
  • Make the source of your advice clear (medical
    knowledge or from similar patients)

15
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Advise with a clear, simple, and personalized
    message.
  • Provide advice at a patient-determined level of
    comprehension
  • Try not to overload her with information in one
    session
  • Can you review for me what we just discussed so
    I know that I made it understandable?

16
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Agree on goals and plans
  • Goals are something to achieve in 3-6 months
  • Collaboratively select goals based on patients
    interest and confidence in her ability to change
    the targeted behavior
  • Base goals on the patients priorities
  • Plans are specific steps to help achieve goals

17
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assist with goals and plans
  • Develop a Personal Action Plan that includes
  • What to do How to do it Where to do it
  • What to use When to do it How often
  • Barriers to doing it Plans to overcome barriers
  • Follow-up plan

18
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assist
  • Personal Action Plan
  • Patient should give herself a confidence rating
    in achieving the Personal Action Plan
  • The action plan should be re-worked if her level
    of confidence is lower than 7 on a scale of 1 to
    10

19
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assist
  • Personal Action Plan
  • Make certain that she has appropriate
    expectations
  • Early on, help her pick some easily achievable
    goals (the low hanging fruit) to help build
    confidence to tackle greater goals

20
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assist in problem solving with Personal Action
    Plan.
  • Identify problem
  • List all possible solutions (brainstorm)
  • Pick one
  • Try it for 2 weeks
  • If it doesnt work, try another

21
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assist in problem solving
  • If that doesnt work, find a resource for ideas
  • If that doesnt work, accept that the problem may
    not be solvable now
  • Move on (but come back later)

22
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assist in changing behavior
  • Provide self-help and counseling pathways to aid
    patient in achieving agreed upon goals
  • Aid the patient in acquiring skills, confidence,
    and social/environmental supports

23
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assist in changing behavior
  • Women tend to respond best to intensive
    interventions between the provider and the
    patient
  • Women tend to respond, more so than men, to
    support groups

Sources Whitlock 2003
24
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Assist with resources
  • Match resources (community, literature, groups)
    with patient preferences
  • Utilize outreach and community opportunities
    whenever feasible

25
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Arrange follow-up
  • Schedule follow-up visits or contacts for purpose
    of providing ongoing assistance and support
  • Try a variety of follow-up methods when feasible
    (in person, phone, email, groups)

26
The 5-As
Counseling Framework for Change
  • Arrange follow-up
  • Making sure follow-up happens builds patient
    trust in the agreed upon clinical pathway
  • Adjust the plan as needed during follow-up visits
    or contacts, including referral elsewhere for
    more intensive intervention

27
Strategy for Change
Stages of Behavioral Change
  • Pre-contemplation
  • Contemplation
  • Preparation
  • Action
  • Maintenance
  • Transformation
  • Prochaska DiClemente model

Sources Prochaska 1992
28
Prochaska Model
Stages of Behavioral Change
  • The provider should be able to determine which
    stage of change the patient is in with respect to
    the targeted behavioral concern.
  • Applying the 5-As at each stage of change
    process affords the provider a monitor in guiding
    and motivating the patient along her trip to
    Transformation

Sources Prochaska 1992
29
Prochaska Model
Pre-contemplation stage
  • She is not ready to change
  • She is not thinking about change
  • She may be resigned to not changing
  • She expresses feeling of no control
  • She exhibits denial or believes consequences are
    not serious

Sources Prochaska 1992
30
Prochaska Model
Contemplation stage
  • She is thinking about changing
  • She is weighing the relative benefits and costs
    of the her current behavior and those of the
    proposed change

Sources Prochaska 1992
31
Prochaska Model
Preparation stage
  • She has begun experimenting with small changes
  • She is getting ready to make a move towards
    behavioral modification
  • She is establishing a goal or at least thinking
    about it

Sources Prochaska 1992
32
Prochaska Model
Action stage
  • She has started her journey towards
    Transformation by applying herself to her
    definitive Personal Action Plan designed to
    facilitate behavioral modification

Sources Prochaska 1992
33
Prochaska Model
Maintenance stage
  • She is maintaining new behavior continuously over
    an extended period of time (gt180 days) to
    accomplish the overall goal

Sources Prochaska 1992
34
Prochaska Model
Relapse
  • The Ups Downs is a normal part of the process
    of change
  • She may regress to the beginning stages of the
    Change Model
  • She may feel demoralized or disappointed (which
    often occurs) by set back
  • Sometimes original goals are set too high or low
    or aggressive

Sources Prochaska 1992
35
Prochaska Model
Transformation
  • She feels self-assured and feels that only time
    separates her from her ultimate goal (if not
    already reached)
  • Transformed patients are often willing to and
    capable of being role models for other patients
    with similar clinical issues

36
Clinical Impact
Keeping Score of Clinical Impact
  • For each identified behavioral change-dependent
    Heart Truth lifestyle intervention, document in
    the health record where the patient is with
    respect to the Prochaska stages

37
Clinical Impact
Keeping Score of Clinical Impact
  • In documenting the stage of change, a numbered
    scale from 1 to 6 might help
  • 1 / pre-contemplation
  • 2 / contemplation
  • 3 / preparation
  • 4 / action
  • 5 / maintenance
  • 6 / transformation
  • This enumeration creates a Change Scale

38
Clinical Impact
Keeping Score of Clinical Impact
  • Where your patient is on the Change Scale scores
    how far you have advanced relative to the extent
    to which she is responding to your methodology
    and available resources
  • Repeatedly ask yourself Can I and What Can I
    do better or more of in helping and
    motivating my patient towards beneficial change,
    thus improving the score?

39
Clinical Impact
Keeping Score of Clinical Impact
  • The clinical impact of the Heart Truth objectives
    is dependent on
  • Achievement of recommended Heart Truth clinical
    measures and benchmarks
  • Availability of and access to resources
  • Degree of difficulty and severity of the
    patients condition, inclusive of co-morbidities

40
Clinical Impact
Keeping Score of Clinical Impact
  • Finally, the clinical impact of the Heart Truth
    objectives is dependent on
  • The effectiveness of the provider-patient
    relationship and all that it entails (e.g.,
    dedication of time, use of resources, intensity
    of participation of all parties, provider
    patient resourcefulness, and contributions of all
    parties)
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