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Can the Type A Behavior Pattern be Altered after Myocardial Infarction? A Second Year Report from the Recurrent Coronary Prevention Project
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1984
Year
CounselingFamily MedicineHeart FailurePreventive CardiologyHealth PsychologyMental HealthCoronary Artery DiseaseAcute Myocardial InfarctionNon-pharmacological InterventionPublic HealthCardiologyMyocardial InfarctionCardiac CounselingBehavioral SciencesCardiovascular EpidemiologyPsychiatryHealth PolicyType ACardiac CareBehavior Change (Individual)EpidemiologyBehavioral MedicineCardiovascular DiseaseType A StyleHealth BehaviorSecond Year ReportMedicine
The feasibility of altering a Type A style of life was investigated in 1012 nonsmoking predominantly male postinfarction volunteers in the San Francisco Bay area. A total of 862 were randomly allocated into an experimental section receiving a combination of Type A and cardiac counseling, or a control section receiving cardiac counseling alone. The remaining 150 formed a nonrandom but statistically equivalent comparison section. Assessments of change in Type A behavior were made by the participant, his or her spouse, a work colleague, and an independent rater of a videotaped structured interview. Psychometric analyses indicated that these instruments were valid and reliable measures of Type A behavior. After 24 months, participants receiving Type A/cardiac counseling exhibited a significantly greater reduction in Type A behavior than the other two sections, and had a lower cardiovascular recurrence rate than the comparison section only. No differences among the three sections were observed in total cholesterol or resting blood pressure. The results suggest that Type A behavior can be altered by group counseling in postinfarction volunteers and that such alteration is superior to no group counseling at all in the secondary prevention of coronary heart disease.