| dc.description.abstract | Background: Empirical evidence has shown that cardiac rehabilitation programs are effective in reducing morbidity and mortality, improving quality of life in patients with cardiovascular disease.
Despite the benefits, women have a high cardiac rehabilitation dropout rate. Our aim was to
explore women’s perceptions about the reasons they faced for dropout from these programs.
Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with women (n = 10) after dropping out from
three different cardiac rehabilitation centers in Spain. In addition, a focus group and a semistructured interview with cardiovascular professionals were conducted. From a grounded theory perspective, thematic analysis was used to derive themes from interview transcripts.
Results: The women were between 41 and 70 years. We identified five general themes that illustrated reasons for cardiac rehabilitation dropout: intrapersonal reasons (self-reported health, self-reported mental health, health beliefs); interpersonal reasons (family caregiver role, work conflicts); logistical reasons (transport, distance); cardiac rehabilitation program characteristics (perception of the objective of cardiac rehabilitation, exercise component, inconvenient timing, cardiac rehabilitation equipment); and health system reasons (financial assistance for transport, long waiting list). The cardiovascular professionals found barriers to cardiac rehabilitation completion similar to those found by the women. | es |