This study aims to evaluate the psychosocial situation of adult congenital heart disease (CHD) patients in terms of health-related quality of life, mental health, academic achievement, and employment status. By assessing a wide variety of medical (e.g., disease severity) and psychosocial (e.g., life events, coping strategies, personality) risk factors it will be possible to better understand the variables that influence psychosocial outcome of young adults with congenital heart disease. This will further improve the understanding of the lifelong consequences of a congenital heart malformation. Factors that proof to be predictors of favorable outcome represent a resource of resilience and therefore should play an important role in the care of CHD patients. By implementing those results in patient care the investigators aim to achieve an improved psychosocial outcome among adult congenital heart disease (ACHD). Hypothesis 1: It is expected that perceived health status, health-related quality of life and psychological adjustment will not differ between the patient and the control group. However, academic achievement and employment status are expected to be poorer in young adults with congenital heart disease compared to healthy controls. Hypothesis 2: It is assumed that parental socioeconomic status, problems in emotional regulation and impaired social support will be related to a negative psychosocial outcome and health-related quality of life. Moreover, the investigators hypothesize that disease severity is associated with academic outcome and employment status.
Background: With an incidence of 6 in 1000 live born children congenital heart disease is among the most common birth defects. Survival rates of children with CHD have significantly improved during the past decades due to better surgical and intensive care medicine. Nowadays, even children requiring open- heart surgery for CHD most frequently have a good cardiac outcome and survive into adulthood. Even those with the most complex forms of CHD have sufficient cardiac outcome. However, impaired quality of life, mental health and behavior problems, as well as neurocognitive and motor impairments have been described to occur more frequently in children with CHD compared to healthy children and may persist into adolescence. Current findings on QoL, psychological adjustment, and academic achievements in young adults with CHD are currently quite inconsistent due to methodological reasons. Moreover, little is known on risk factors for a negative outcome. To date, mainly medical risk factors have been examined while psychosocial characteristics (e.g., socioeconomic status, parenting, family characteristics) have not been systematically studied. Importantly, little is known about academic achievements and employment situations of young adults with CHD. Aims: In this study the investigators aim to evaluate the psychosocial situation of adult CHD patients in terms of health-related quality of life, mental health, academic achievement, and employment status. Methods: The study is designed as a case-control study beeing a mono-center project. The patient group will consist of a maximum of 350 patients with congenital heart disease treated at the cardiologic department of the University Hospital Zurich and a control group consisting of the same amount of also up to 350 individuals beeing good friends of the patients with same gender and similar age. Recruitment: Participants will be consecutively recruited from May 1st, 2015 to April 30th, 2016. Eligible patients will be contacted by the study nurse during the outpatient consultation at the university hospital. Patients will be informed about the study during their consultation by the study nurse as well as the doctor with whom they have their appointment.The control group will be recruited as good friends (same gender, approx. same age) of the patients.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
325
no intervention
UniversityHospital Zurich
Zurich, Switzerland
Health related Quality of life
Health related Quality of life will be assessed by the SF-36 questionnaire (Bullinger \& Kirchberger, 1998).
Time frame: up to 12 months
Psychological adjustment
Psychological adjustment will be assessed by the symptom checklist-27 (SCL-27).
Time frame: up to 12 months
Academic achievement / employment situation
Academic achievement / employment situation will be assessed by means of a self-developed questionnaire: Participants will be asked to give information on their own education by means of number of school years, number of school year repetitions, type of schooling, need for special schooling or tutoring, age at graduation from school, completed apprenticeship and current employment status.
Time frame: up to 12 months
Medical data
Medical data will be collected only for the patients from their medical records: Exact cardiac diagnosis, number of surgeries on cardio-pulmonary bypass, number of interventional procedures, current functional class (according to the New Your Heart Association functional class), biometric characteristics (body weight, height, body mass index), current clinical findings (oxygen saturation, respiratory rate, heart rate, blood pressure), current medication, previous cardiovascular complications (arrhythmias, heart failure, endocarditis, stroke), current echocardiographic findings (ventricular function, residual valve regurgitation or stenosis, residual shunts), data from exercise testing (maximal exercise capacity, maximal oxygen uptake, heart rate reserve), findings from cardiac catheterization and cardiac MRI or CT, if available.
Time frame: up to 12 months
Executive functions
Executive functions will be measured with the dysexecutive questionnaire (DEX) (Wilson, Alderman, Burgess, Emslie, \& Evans, 1996).
Time frame: up to 12 months
Major life events
Major life events will be assessed for the previous 12 months by a 12-item scale regarding for example unemployment, change of domicile, death of family members or friends (Landolt \& Vollrath, 1998).
Time frame: up to 12 months
Social support
Social support will be assessed by means of the the F-SozU, a 14-item short form questionnaire assessing subjectively perceived emotional and instrumental support as well as social integration (Fydrich, Sommer \& Brähler, 2002).
Time frame: up to 12 months
Emotional regulation
Emotional regulation is measured with the FEEL-E, an inventory that assesses 12 strategies (6 adaptive, 6 maladaptive) for regulation of temper, fear and grief (Grob \& Horowitz, 2014).
Time frame: up to 12 months
Socioeconomic status
Socioeconomic status will be calculated by means of a 6-point scale scoring for paternal occupation and maternal education.
Time frame: up to 12 months
Biographical information
Participants will be asked to give information on their family status, own children, citizenship, mother tongue and parents'mother tongue on the same questionnaire they fill out information about education and academic career.
Time frame: up to 12 months
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