Nursing care and research Open access Peer reviewed

Contribution of informal caregivers in the self-care of patients with coronary artery disease: a descriptive cross-sectional study

Ali Aghajanloo, Hamidreza Fallah Abadi, Ramazan Fallah, Zahra Khorshidi

BMC Nursing | Jul 1, 2026

Scollr summary

What this paper is about

Informal caregivers play a key role in maintaining the self-care of CAD patients, whereas their involvement in monitoring and management remains moderate, and targeted caregiver education and support may enhance patient outcomes and reduce readmissions and improve long-term cardiac outcomes.

Full abstract

Read the full abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular diseases, particularly coronary artery disease (CAD), remain the leading cause of death worldwide. Family involvement in self-care is essential for improving health outcomes, especially where professional care is limited. This study aimed to assess the contribution of informal caregivers to the self-care of patients with CAD and to identify related factors. METHODS: This descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted in 2024 at Mousavi Hospital, Zanjan, Iran. A total of 250 patients with confirmed coronary artery disease (CAD) who were admitted to the cardiology ward or cardiac care unit (CCU), along with their 250 informal caregivers, were recruited using convenience sampling. Data were collected using a demographic questionnaire and the Caregiver Contribution to Self-Care of Coronary Heart Disease Inventory (CC-SC-CHDI v3a). Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS version 27, including descriptive statistics, independent t-tests, one-way ANOVA, and multivariable linear regression. RESULTS: The mean caregiver contribution scores were 71.63 ± 14.48 for self-care maintenance, 51.88 ± 19.75 for self-care monitoring, and 50.68 ± 23.59 for self-care management. Caregivers showed the highest involvement in maintenance, exceeding the desirable threshold of 70. Significant associations (P < 0.05) were found between caregiver contribution and several patient characteristics, including gender (P = 0.007), age (P = 0.003), number of children (P = 0.016), income level (P = 0.007), residence (P = 0.001), supplemental insurance coverage (P = 0.001), educational level (P = 0.001), and cardiac ejection fraction (P = 0.036). Patients who had received health education through online platforms were also more engaged in self-care (P = 0.014). In addition, caregivers with higher educational attainment (P = 0.004) demonstrated greater involvement in the maintenance domain. In the regression analysis, female patients had higher maintenance scores (B = 5.74, β = 0.20, P = 0.002, R² = 0.078). Longer illness duration predicted higher monitoring (B = 0.72, β = 0.18, P = 0.006, R² = 0.057) and management (B = 0.79, β = 0.17, P = 0.011, R² = 0.044) scores. Caregiving duration was a positive predictor for monitoring (B = 0.46, β = 0.17, P = 0.019), whereas number of children (B = - 2.43, β = - 0.21, P = 0.034) and being single (B = - 13.45, β = - 0.27, P = 0.003) were associated with lower caregiver contribution in management. CONCLUSION: Informal caregivers play a key role in maintaining the self-care of CAD patients, whereas their involvement in monitoring and management remains moderate. Demographic factors such as education, income, cohabitation, and caregiving duration significantly affect their contribution. Targeted caregiver education and support may enhance patient outcomes and reduce readmissions and improve long-term cardiac outcomes.

Direct answer

What can I do from this paper page?

Use this page to scan "Contribution of informal caregivers in the self-care of patients with coronary artery disease: a descriptive cross-sectional study" quickly: start with the summary and abstract, then check the authors, source, topics, and related papers. From here, open Scollr to follow Nursing care and research, save the paper, or map adjacent work.

Authors

Researchers on this paper

Ali Aghajanloo

first | Zanjan University of Medical Sciences | ORCID 0000-0001-7491-8533

Hamidreza Fallah Abadi

middle | Zanjan University of Medical Sciences

Ramazan Fallah

middle | Zanjan University of Medical Sciences | ORCID 0000-0002-6404-9044

Zahra Khorshidi

last | Zanjan University of Medical Sciences

Research areas

Follow related topics

Citation

BibTeX

@article{Aghajanloo2026Contribution,
  title = {Contribution of informal caregivers in the self-care of patients with coronary artery disease: a descriptive cross-sectional study},
  author = {Ali Aghajanloo and Hamidreza Fallah Abadi and Ramazan Fallah and Zahra Khorshidi},
  journal = {BMC Nursing},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.1186/s12912-026-04535-w},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1186/s12912-026-04535-w}
}

FAQ

Using this paper in a discovery workflow

How do I find related work for this paper?

Use the related papers and topic links on this page as starting points. In Scollr, you can also open the paper and build a literature map around its references, citing papers, and related work.

How can I keep up with new Nursing care and research papers?

Follow Nursing care and research in Scollr. New papers from the topic flow into a personalized feed, and you can save useful studies to revisit later.

Can I cite this paper from this page?

This page includes a static BibTeX block for Contribution of informal caregivers in the self-care of patients with coronary artery disease: a descriptive cross-sectional study. Always verify the DOI, source, and publication details against the publisher record before submitting a manuscript.

Follow this research in Scollr

Follow the topics and authors behind this paper, save useful studies, and build a literature map when you are ready to go deeper.

Get the app