Cardiac Rehabilitation: Guide to Procedures for the Twenty-first Century

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1999-06-29
Publisher(s): CRC Press
List Price: $210.00

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Summary

This detailed reference provides practical strategies and a scientific foundation for designing and implementing cardiac rehabilitation services to relieve the symptoms of cardiovascular disease patients through exercise training and risk reduction and secondary prevention, improve quality of life, and decrease mortality. Emphasizes multidisciplinary care that includes exercise training, behavioral interventions, and education and counseling regarding lifestyle changes and other aspects of secondary prevention! Written by world-renowned physicians, nurses, exercise physiologists, psychologists, dietitians, educators, and counselors in the field, Cardiac Rehabilitation presents evidence-based medicine as the cornerstone of clinical cardiology practice discusses interventions that limit the physiological and psychological effects of cardiac illness offers guidelines that enable elderly patients to maintain self-sufficiency and functional independence describes means of social and workplace reintegration evaluates policies for maintaining high-quality care, efficacy, and safety in an atmosphere of diminishing resources explains the role of managed care in moving rehabilitative care into the home, workplace, and other nontraditional sites assesses new interactive technologies that aid in tracking patient data gives pragmatic recommendations for the delivery of cardiac rehabilitative care in the next millenium and more! Advocating integrated, high-quality, consistent cardiac rehabilitation services for the well-being of patients recovering from a variety of cardiovascular problems and procedures, Cardiac Rehabilitation is ideally suited for cardiologists, cardiovascular surgeons, primary care physicians, cardiac rehabilitation professionals, cardiac care nurses, dietitians, physical and occupational therapists, exercise physiologists, psychologists, behavioral counselors, hospital managers, health plan designers, and upper-level undergraduate, graduate, and medical school students in these disciplines.

Table of Contents

Series Introduction v
Preface vii
Contributors xv
Overview: Charting the Course for Cardiac Rehabilitation into the 21st Century
1(8)
Nanette K. Wenger
Part I. Exercise Training
Benefits of Exercise Training
9(10)
L. Kent Smith
Nanette K. Wenger
The National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference Statement on Physical Activity and Cardiovascular Health
19(4)
Arthur S. Leon
Rehabilitation Considerations in Exercise Testing
23(26)
Barry A. Franklin
Amy L. Fowler
Ken Tobin
Exercise Prescription
49(18)
Michael L. Pollock
Paulo Sergio Gomes
Assessment for Exercise Training: Contraindications, Risk Stratification, and Safety Issues
67(8)
Neil F. Gordon
Components of Exercise Training
75(20)
Ray W. Squires
Life-Long Exercise: Counseling for Exercise Maintenance
95(8)
Linda K. Hall
Supervised Versus Unsupervised Exercise Training: Risks and Benefits
103(6)
Robert F. DeBusk
Exercise Training in Special Populations: The Elderly
109(8)
Philip A. Ades
Exercise Training in Special Populations: Women
117(10)
Lauralyn B. Cannistra
Gary J. Balady
Exercise Training in Special Populations: Heart Failure and Post-Transplantation Patients
127(14)
Ileana L. Pina
Exercise Training in Special Populations: Diabetes
141(10)
Donald A. Smith
Jill Crandall
Exercise Training in Special Populations: Obesity
151(4)
Carl J. Lavie
Richard V. Milani
Exercise Training in Special Populations: Valvular Heart Disease
155(8)
Henry S. Miller
Exercise Training in Special Populations: Pacemakers and Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillators
163(8)
Robert A. Schweikert
Fredric J. Pashkow
Exercise Training in Special Populations: Peripheral Arterial Disease
171(8)
Mitzi A. Ekers
Exercise Training in Special Populations: Associated Noncardiac Morbidities
179(8)
Barbara J. Fletcher
Gerald F. Fletcher
Part II. Education, Counseling, and Behavioral Interventions
Multifactorial Cardiac Rehabilitation: Education, Counseling, and Behavioral Interventions
187(6)
Erika Sivarajan Froelicher
Matching the Intensity of Risk Factor Modification with the Hazard for Coronary Disease Events
193(8)
Valentin Fuster
Thomas A. Pearson
Scientific Basis for Multifactorial Risk Reduction: Overview with Emphasis on National Guidelines
201(12)
Sanuj K. Ravindran
Philip Greenland
Smoking Cessation and Relapse Prevention: Case Management Approaches
213(10)
Nancy Houston-Miller
Lipid Lowering for Coronary Risk Reduction
223(12)
Joan M. Fair
Management of Hypertension
235(12)
Martha N. Hill
Weight Management and Exercise in the Treatment of Obesity
247(10)
Anne M. Dattilo
Psychosocial Risk Factors: Overview, Assessment, and Intervention for Anger and Hostility
257(6)
Wayne M. Sotile
Psychosocial Risk Factors: Assessment and Intervention for Depression
263(16)
C. Barr Taylor
Rebecca P. Cameron
Psychosocial Risk Factors: Assessment and Intervention for Social Isolation
279(8)
Carol Rogers Pitula
Matthew M. Burg
Erika Sivarajan Froelicher
Stress Management
287(8)
Eileen M. Stuart-Shor
Return to Work: Factors and Issues of Vocational Counseling
295(8)
Diane Shea Pravikoff
Education for Special Populations
303(6)
Alan J. Goble
Quality-of-Life Assessment in Secondary Prevention
309(6)
Laura L. Kee
Part III. Moving Cardiac Rehabilitation into the Next Century: Contemporary Challenges and Implementation Issues
The New Infrastructure for Cardiac Rehabilitation Practice
315(12)
Patricia McCall Comoss
Case Management in Cardiac Rehabilitation
327(16)
Barbara Tate Unger
Deidre A. Warren
Home-Based Cardiac Rehabilitation: Variations on a Theme
343(18)
Susan Rogutski
Kathy Berra
William Haskell
Behavioral Change---Getting Started and Being Successful
361(10)
James Prochaska
Karen Congdon
Motivating and Empowering Patients for Self-Learning
371(14)
Susan Herr Swails
Barbara H. Southard
Adherence to a Heart-Healthy Lifestyle---What Makes the Difference?
385(10)
Lora E. Burke
Measuring Program Quality---Applying Standards and Guidelines
395(14)
Dwight Davis
William G. Herbert
Carl N. King
Streamlining and Computerizing Cardiac Rehabilitation Charting
409(14)
Patricia McCall Comoss
Jody C. Heggestad
Patient Outcomes in Cardiac Rehabilitation: What, Why, and When to Measure
423(12)
Peg Pashkow
Cynthia L. MacDonald
Medicolegal Issues: Practice Guidelines---Friend or Foe?
435(12)
Sue Dill
Economic Issues: The Value and Effectiveness of Cardiac Rehabilitation
447(24)
Martha D. Livingston
Charles Dennis
Challenges and Opportunities for Additional Research
471(1)
Nanette K. Wenger
L. Kent Smith
Erika Sivarajan Froelicher
Patricia McCall Comoss
Index 471

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