Perceived personal risk and vulnerability in recognizing and responding to symptoms of acute coronary syndrome: an integrative review
European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

Abstract
Simply knowing the common symptoms of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is not sufficient to ensure prompt care-seeking when these symptoms occur. Factors other than symptom knowledge contribute to prompt care-seeking behaviours and correct symptom attribution to the heart.
To explore how perceived personal risk and perceived personal vulnerability towards ACS affect a person’s ACS symptom recognition and attribution and also how this perception affects a person’s response to ACS symptoms.
An integrative review, using Whittemore and Knafl’s approach.
PubMed, Academic Search Complete, CINAHL Complete, APA PsycINFO, and APA PsycARTICLES
We included studies that (i) were original human-subjects research or secondary analyses of human-subjects research, (ii) provided information about how perceptions of risk or perceptions of vulnerability towards ACS or heart disease affect symptom recognition, attribution, and/or response to symptoms, and (iii) were published in English.
Thirteen articles were included. Studies were conducted in nine different countries and were descriptive or exploratory in nature. The existing evidence suggests that perceived personal risk or vulnerability towards heart disease may promote earlier care-seeking for ACS symptoms and facilitates attribution of symptoms to the heart.
The designs of the included studies limit causal attribution, and additional prospective and intervention-based research is needed to determine how perceived risk/vulnerability may affect care-seeking and ACS symptom attribution. Increasing perceptions of vulnerability towards heart disease may reduce care seeking delay.
Contributors

John R Blakeman
Author

Marilyn A Prasun
Author
