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Marital Status and Outcome in Patients with Coronary Heart Disease
Authors:Lynn A Rankin-Esquer  Nancy Houston Miller  Denise Myers  C Barr Taylor
Institution:(1) Stanford University School of Medicine, USA;(2) Graduate School of Education and Psychology, Pepperdine University, Culver City, California, 90230;(3) Kaiser Permanente, USA
Abstract:The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship of marital status to health outcomes in 818 post-MI, coronary artery bypass surgery, and angioplasty patients (651 males, 157 females) from seven Northern California hospitals who completed 12 months of a nurse-managed, home-based multifactorial risk reduction program. Compared to married patients, nonmarried patients were significantly less likely to complete the program than married patients, more likely to smoke at baseline, and drank significantly less alcohol at baseline. At 12 months there were no significant differences between married and nonmarried groups on smoking cessation rates, HDL, LDL, triglycerides, or exercise treadmill test results. When patients were categorized as married, divorced, separated, widowed, or single, similar results were found for the analyses using two groups (married versus nonmarried), with the following exceptions. Separated patients were significantly less likely to quit smoking. In addition, separated patients showed significantly higher rates of starting (and continuing) to smoke during the time following their MI. Mortality was not significantly different between married and unmarried patients. Implications for intervention with separated patients and the importance of assessing both marital status and marital quality are discussed.
Keywords:marriage  coronary heart disease  myocardial infarction  social support
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