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NR 630 ASSIGNMENT, INITIATION OF CAPSTONE PROJECT, CARDIAC WELLNESS

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NR 630 ASSIGNMENT, INITIATION OF CAPSTONE PROJECT, CARDIAC WELLNESS

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  • March 9, 2022
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  • 2021/2022
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Running head: INITIATION OF CAPSTONE PROJECT 1


NR 630 ASSIGNMENT, INITIATION OF CAPSTONE

PROJECT, CARDIAC WELLNESS


Cardiac Wellness Program

In 2012, 17.5 million people died from heart disease and accounted for 31 percent of the

global mortality rate. The conditions that were reported on were acute coronary syndromes such

as ST elevation, myocardial infarction, non-ST elevation myocardial infarction, and unstable

angina. These patients are fifty percent more likely to be readmitted with life threatening

conditions. (Hamilton, Mills, B. McRae, & Thompson, 2018) With an aging demographic in the

community and the current demands placed on nursing leaders to provide quality and affordable

healthcare while maintaining patient satisfaction determined a need to look for evidence-based

research to decrease cardiac readmissions through the implementation of a cardiac wellness

program. The goal for the program is to decrease the hospitals cardiac readmissions by forty

percent and show a return on investment in one year.

Summary: The article describes the opportunity the Affordable Care Act offers to

improve public health in the United States by building workplace cultures of health. The author

suggests that the prevention and public health fund offers the community opportunities to

strengthen public health through wellness programs with a strategy to focus on wellness and

prevention. This article is relevant and provides current evidence-based data to support the

implementation of a cardiac wellness program. Anderko L, Roffenbender JS, Goetzel RZ,

Millard F, Wildenhaus K, DeSantis, C., Novelli, W. (2012). Promoting prevention through the

affordable care act: Workplace Wellness. Preventing Chronic Disease, 9:120092.

, INITIATION OF CAPSTONE PROJECT 2


Summary: This study found that a high percentage of cardiovascular disease patients

have poor dentition, but overall lack awareness of how their oral health can impact their

cardiovascular outcomes. The results suggest that a holistic cardiac wellness program should

promote the importance of providing health advice and referral services to affordable dental

professionals. The article reinforces the aspects of preventative healthcare playing a key role in

the cardiac wellness setting by developing a dental referral pathway and the opportunity to

receive oral health education. This article is relevant and provides current evidence-based data to

support the need to incorporate oral health education into a holistic cardiac wellness program.

Sanchez, P., Everett, B., Ajwani, S., Bhole, S., Bishop, J., Lintern, K., Nolan, Rajaratnaum, R.,

Redfern, J., Sheehan, M., Skarligos, F., Spencer, L., Srinivas, R., George,. (2017). Oral health

and cardiovascular care: perceptions of people with cardiovascular disease. PloS ONE. 12 (7). 1-

17.

Summary: This article evaluates the barriers to care experienced by patients in the post-

acute phase of their cardiac rehabilitation. It was discovered that geography, service availability

and population density had a direct correlation on the limited access to cardiac rehabilitation

services. The author reports a need for implementation of systemic data collection to establish

benchmarks suggesting this will allow services to be evaluated and monitored. Utilizing

emerging technology to create access to health pathways that facilitate a referral base and

continuity of care. This article is relevant and provides current evidence-based data to support

the need to incorporate alternative access pathways to patients with limited transportation and

access issues. Hamilton, S., Mills, B., McRae, S., & Thompson, S. (2018). Evidence to service

gap: cardiac rehabilitation and secondary prevention in rural and remote Western

Australia. BMC Health Services Research, 181-9. doi:10.1186/s12913-018-2873-8

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