Blended collaborative care in the secondary prevention of coronary heart disease improves risk factor control: Results of a randomised feasibility study
European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

Abstract
Risk factor control is essential in limiting the progression of coronary heart disease, but the necessary active patient involvement is often difficult to realise, especially in patients suffering psychosocial risk factors (e.g. distress). Blended collaborative care has been shown as an effective treatment addition, in which a (non-physician) care manager supports patients in implementing and sustaining lifestyle changes, follows-up on patients, and integrates care across providers, targeting both, somatic and psychosocial risk factors.
The aim of this study was to test the feasibility, acceptance and effect of a six-month blended collaborative care intervention in Germany.
For our randomised controlled pilot study with a crossover design we recruited coronary heart disease patients with ⩾1 insufficiently controlled cardiac risk factors and randomised them to either immediate blended collaborative care intervention (immediate intervention group,
Participation rate in the intervention phase was 67% (
This study shows that blended collaborative care can be a feasible, accepted and effective addition to standard medical care in the secondary prevention of coronary heart disease in the German healthcare system.
Contributors

Lena Bosselmann
Author

Stella V Fangauf
Author

Birgit Herbeck Belnap
Author

Mira-Lynn Chavanon
Author

Jonas Nagel
Author

Claudia Neitzel
Author

Anna Schertz
Author

Eva Hummers
Author

Rolf Wachter
Author

Christoph Herrmann-Lingen
Author
