"Is My Heart Healing?" A Meta-synthesis of Patients' Experiences After Acute Myocardial Infarction

J Cardiovasc Nurs. 2021 Sep-Oct;36(5):517-530. doi: 10.1097/JCN.0000000000000732.

Abstract

Background: Recovery from acute myocardial infarction (AMI) has been primarily understood in a narrow medical sense. For patients who survive, secondary prevention focuses largely on enhancing clinical outcomes. As a result, there is a lack of descriptive accounts of patients' experiences after AMI and little is known about how people go about the challenge of recovering from such an event.

Objective: We conducted a meta-synthesis of the available literature on qualitative accounts of patients' experiences after AMI.

Methods: We searched for relevant papers that were descriptive, qualitative accounts of participants' experiences after AMI across 4 electronic databases (April 2016). Using an adapted meta-ethnography approach, we analyzed the findings by translating studies into one another and synthesizing the findings from the studies.

Results: After a review of titles/abstracts, reading each article twice in full, and cross-referencing articles, this process resulted in 17 studies with 224 participants (48% women) aged 23 to 90 years. All participants provided a first-person account of an AMI within the 3-day to 25-year time frame. Two major themes emerged that characterized patients' experiences: navigating lifestyle changes and navigating the emotional reaction to the event-consisting of various subthemes.

Conclusion: Although AMI tends to be seen as a discrete event, participants are left with little professional guidance as to how to negotiate significant, and often discordant, psychosocial changes that have long-lasting effects on their lives, similar to persons with chronic illnesses but without research in place to figure out how to best support them.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Anthropology, Cultural
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Life Style
  • Male
  • Myocardial Infarction*
  • Qualitative Research