Caregivers promote heart failure self-care, yet little is known about how relationship quality and dyad gender influences self-care. The purpose of this study was to evauluate the contribution of dyad gender and relationship quality on heart failure self-care. The study was a secondary analysis from a heart failure self-care intervention. Dyad gender was categorized by patient-caregiver gender as Male-Male (M + M), Female-Female (F + F), Female-Male (Fp + Mc), and Male-Female (Mp + Fc). The Self-Care of Heart Failure Index v.6.2 measured self-care. The Mutuality Scale assessed relationship quality. Univariate linear regression identified determinants of patient self-care maintenance and self-efficacy. The sample (n = 503) was 48% Mp + Fc, 2...
Background Despite a common view that women are better at self-care, there is very little evidence t...
The chronic illness literature suggests that patient–informal caregiver dyads who are relationally o...
The majority of heart failure (HF) self-care research remains focused on patients, despite the impor...
Caregivers promote heart failure self-care, yet little is known about how relationship quality and d...
Mutuality in patient–caregiver dyad may improve heart failure (HF) patient self-care and caregiver c...
Heart failure (HF) is a chronic and progressive syndrome of cardiac impairment, affecting nearly 6 m...
Background The ways in which patients with heart failure (HF) and their care partners work together...
Introduction. Many heart failure (HF) patients rely on informal caregivers to assist them with self-...
BACKGROUND:The majority of heart failure (HF) self-care research remains focused on patients, despit...
Disease self-management is a critical component of maintaining clinical stability for patients with ...
Disease self-management is a critical component of maintaining clinical stability for patients with ...
Objectives: To identify the gender differences in self-care maintenance and its associations among c...
Background: Chronic illness management is increasingly carried out at home by individuals and their ...
Background Despite a common view that women are better at self-care, there is very little evidence t...
The chronic illness literature suggests that patient–informal caregiver dyads who are relationally o...
The majority of heart failure (HF) self-care research remains focused on patients, despite the impor...
Caregivers promote heart failure self-care, yet little is known about how relationship quality and d...
Mutuality in patient–caregiver dyad may improve heart failure (HF) patient self-care and caregiver c...
Heart failure (HF) is a chronic and progressive syndrome of cardiac impairment, affecting nearly 6 m...
Background The ways in which patients with heart failure (HF) and their care partners work together...
Introduction. Many heart failure (HF) patients rely on informal caregivers to assist them with self-...
BACKGROUND:The majority of heart failure (HF) self-care research remains focused on patients, despit...
Disease self-management is a critical component of maintaining clinical stability for patients with ...
Disease self-management is a critical component of maintaining clinical stability for patients with ...
Objectives: To identify the gender differences in self-care maintenance and its associations among c...
Background: Chronic illness management is increasingly carried out at home by individuals and their ...
Background Despite a common view that women are better at self-care, there is very little evidence t...
The chronic illness literature suggests that patient–informal caregiver dyads who are relationally o...
The majority of heart failure (HF) self-care research remains focused on patients, despite the impor...