Cardiac Rehabilitation Availability and Delivery in Canada: How does it Compare to other High-Income Countries?

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Date

2018-09-28

Authors

Tran, Michelle
Pesah, Ella
Turk-Adawi, Karam
Supervia, Marta
Lopez-Jimenez, Francisco
Oh, P.
Baer, Carolyn
Grace, Sherry

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

Background

Canada has insufficient cardiac rehabilitation (CR) capacity, yet unmet need is unknown. Moreover, Canada has CR guidelines, but whether delivery conforms has not been characterized by province/territory. This study aimed to establish (1) CR volumes, capacity, and density, as well as (2) the nature of programs, and (3) compare these (a) by province/territory and (b) with other high-income countries (HICs).

Methods

In this cross-sectional study, an online survey was administered to CR programs globally. National cardiac associations were engaged to facilitate program identification where available, or local champions. Density was computed using Canada’s Chronic Disease Surveillance System ischemic heart disease incidence estimates. Twenty-eight HICs with CR were selected for comparison (N = 619 programs), and multilevel analyses performed.

Results

CR was available in 10 of 13 (76.9%) provinces (no programs in Canada’s North), with 74 of 182 programs initiating a survey (40.7% response). Program volumes (median = 250) were greatest in Ontario, but ultimately there was only 1 CR spot per 4.55 patients with ischemic heart disease nationally (similar in other HICs), and 186,187 more spots are needed annually. Most programs were funded by government/hospital sources (n = 48, 66.7%), but in 23 (31.5%), patients paid some or all of program costs out-of-pocket. Guideline-indicated conditions were accepted in more than 90% of programs. Programs had a multidisciplinary team of 6.2 ± 2.1 staff, offering 7.7 ± 1.5/10 core components (varied by province, P = 0.001; return-to-work offered less frequently than other HICs; P = 0.03), over 42.0 ± 26.0 hours (provincial and other HIC differences, P < 0.001).

Conclusions

Canadian CR capacity must be augmented, but where available, services are consistent with other HICs.

Description

© 2018. This accepted manuscript is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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Citation

Tran, M., Pesah, E., Turk-Adawi, K., Supervia, M., Lopez Jimenez, F., Oh, P., Baer, C., & Grace, S. L. (2018). Cardiac Rehabilitation Availability and Delivery in Canada: How Does It Compare With Other High-Income Countries? Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 34(10), S252–S262. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cjca.2018.07.413