Effects of an intensive long-term prevention programme after myocardial infarction – a randomized trial
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology

Abstract
Long-term risk factor control after myocardial infarction (MI) is currently inadequate and there is an unmet need for effective secondary prevention programmes.
It was the aim of the study to compare a 12-month intensive prevention programme (IPP), coordinated by prevention assistants and including education sessions, telephone visits and telemetric risk factor control, with usual care after MI. Three hundred and ten patients were randomized to IPP
Global risk factor control was strongly improved directly after MI before the beginning of the randomized study (30% increase IPP Prevention Score). During the 12-month course of the randomized trial the IPP Prevention Score was improved by a further 14.3% in the IPP group (
A novel intensive prevention programme after MI, coordinated by prevention assistants and using personal teachings and telemetric strategies for 12 months, was significantly superior to usual care in providing sustainable risk factor control and better quality of life.
Contributors

Harm Wienbergen
Author

Andreas Fach
Author

Sven Meyer
Author

Jochen Meyer
Author

Janina Stehmeier
Author

Tina Backhaus
Author

Stephan Michel
Author

Kirsten Krämer
Author

Rico Osteresch
Author

Johannes Schmucker
Author

Henning Haase
Author

Tobias Härle
Author

Albrecht Elsässer
Author

Rainer Hambrecht
Author

