BACKGROUND:
As medical treatments for coronary heart disease have become more sophisticated, they have
also become more costly. Evidence concerning the effects of medical and rehabilitative
therapies on post-myocardial infarction patients' quality of life, including return to work
and to normal levels of functioning, has been mixed. At the same time. recent data suggest
that psychosocial factors, such as social isolation and depression, are important predictors
of morbidity and mortality in coronary heart disease patients. These studies suggest that
interventions which provide psychological support to myocardial infarction patients may
enhance both the psychosocial and physical recovery of these patients. To the extent that
supportive interventions can be shown to impact favorably on survival and health-related
quality of life in myocardial infarction patients, the human and financial costs associated
with coronary heart disease can be reduced. The initiative originated in the Working Group on
Psychosocial Interventions which met in June 1992.
The initiative was given concept clearance by the October 1993 National Heart, Lung, and
Blood Advisory Council. The Request for Proposals was released in September 1994.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The study design compared a psychosocial intervention group, in which patients were provided
with social and psychological treatment designed to decrease social isolation and depression,
with a standard medical care group. The combined endpoint was death and reinfarction,
measured for up to 4.5 years following hospital discharge. Secondary endpoints included
assessment of health quality of life (HQL).
The protocol was approved in May 1996. Recruitment began in October 1996 and ended on October
31, 1999 with 2,481 patients enrolled.