All Stories

  1. The relationship between psychological states and health perception in individuals at risk for cardiovascular disease
  2. Evidence-Based Heart Failure Medications and Cognition
  3. Health-Related Quality of Life, Functional Status, and Cardiac Event-Free Survival in Patients With Heart Failure
  4. Symptoms of acute myocardial infarction: A correlational study of the discrepancy between patients’ expectations and experiences
  5. Changes in Depressive Symptoms and Mortality in Patients With Heart Failure
  6. Decreasing sedentary behavior by 30 minutes per day reduces cardiovascular disease risk factors in rural Americans
  7. Concerns about implantable cardioverter-defibrillator shocks mediate the relationship between actual shocks and psychological distress
  8. Antioxidant Activity of Hybrid Grape Pomace Extracts Derived from Midwestern Grapes in Bulk Oil and Oil-in-Water Emulsions
  9. Self-reported Adherence to a Low-Sodium Diet and Health Outcomes in Patients With Heart Failure
  10. Health Literacy Predicts Morbidity and Mortality in Rural Patients With Heart Failure
  11. Type D personality, self-efficacy, and medication adherence in patients with heart failure—A mediation analysis
  12. The Association of Co-morbid Symptoms of Depression and Anxiety With All-Cause Mortality and Cardiac Rehospitalization in Patients With Heart Failure
  13. Awareness of modifiable acute myocardial infarction risk factors has little impact on risk perception for heart attack among vulnerable patients
  14. The Contribution of Symptom Incongruence to Prehospital Delay for Acute Myocardial Infarction Symptoms Among Jordanian Patients
  15. CONGRUENCE OF TIME FROM SYMPTOM ONSET ACCORDING TO MEDICAL RECORD VERSUS SUBJECT INTERVIEW IN PATIENTS DIAGNOSED WITH ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME
  16. Adherence to a Low-Sodium Diet in Patients With Heart Failure Is Best When Family Members Also Follow the Diet
  17. The Association Between Regular Symptom Monitoring and Self-care Management in Patients With Heart Failure
  18. Psychometric Properties of the Symptom Status Questionnaire–Heart Failure
  19. Lycopene Dietary Intervention
  20. Development and Testing of the Feasibility and Acceptability of a Tailored Dietary Intervention in Patients With Heart Failure
  21. The Impact of Body Mass Index on the Link Between Depressive Symptoms and Health Outcome in Patients With Heart Failure
  22. Modifiable correlates of physical symptoms and health-related quality of life in patients with heart failure: A cross-sectional study
  23. Identification of symptom clusters among patients with heart failure: An international observational study
  24. Cognitive Dysfunction in Older Adults Hospitalized for Acute Heart Failure
  25. Shared Decision-Making about End-of-Life Care for Heart Failure Patients with an Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator: A National Cohort Study
  26. Symptom Trajectories in Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Patients With or Without Pre-operative Heart Failure
  27. Psychometric Properties of the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 in Patients With Heart Failure and Gastrointestinal Symptoms
  28. Improving knowledge, attitudes and beliefs about acute coronary syndrome through an individualized educational intervention: A randomized controlled trial
  29. Characteristics associated with anxiety, depressive symptoms, and quality-of-life in a large cohort of implantable cardioverter defibrillator recipients
  30. Association between Depressive Symptoms and Emotional Well-Being Was Moderated by Gender, Not Caregiving Status, in Heart Failure Patient-Caregiver Dyads
  31. Psychometric Validation of the Chinese Version of the Control Attitudes Scale-Revised in Taiwanese Heart Failure Patients
  32. Symptom Clusters and the Prediction of Hospitalization and Mortality in Patients with Heart Failure
  33. Self-Reported Sleep Dysfunction is Associated with Worse Cardiac Event-Free Survival in Patients with Heart Failure
  34. The Healthy Eating Index is Not a Predictor of Event-Free Survival in Patients with Heart Failure
  35. The Feasibility of the Family Cognitive Educational Intervention to Improve Depressive symptoms and Quality of Life in Patients with Heart Failure and Their Family Caregivers
  36. Postdischarge Nausea and Vomiting: Management Strategies and Outcomes Over 7 Days
  37. Anxiety and Adverse Health Outcomes Among Cardiac Patients
  38. Types of social support and their relationships to physical and depressive symptoms and health-related quality of life in patients with heart failure
  39. Shotgun Pyrosequencing Metagenomic Analyses of Dusts from Swine Confinement and Grain Facilities
  40. A Randomized Controlled Trial to Reduce Prehospital Delay Time in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS)
  41. Slow-onset and Fast-onset Symptom Presentations In Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS): New Perspectives on Prehospital Delay in Patients with ACS
  42. Incidence and Predictors of Postdischarge Nausea and Vomiting in a 7-Day Population
  43. O107 Depressive symptoms mediate the relationship between sleep quality and health-related quality of life in heart failure
  44. Depressive symptoms, health-related quality of life, and cardiac event-free survival in patients with heart failure: a mediation analysis
  45. ICD Recipients’ Understanding of Ethical Issues, ICD Function, and Practical Consequences of Withdrawing the ICD in the End-of-Life
  46. Rural Appalachian Perspectives on Heart Health: Social Ecological Contexts
  47. Knowledge is insufficient for self-care among heart failure patients with psychological distress.
  48. The Link of Unintentional Weight Loss to Cardiac Event–Free Survival in Patients With Heart Failure
  49. Rural Patients’ Knowledge About Heart Failure
  50. Predicting Coronary Heart Disease Events in Women
  51. Are ICD recipients able to foresee if they want to withdraw therapy or deactivate defibrillator shocks?
  52. Type D Personality Predicts Poor Medication Adherence in Patients with Heart Failure in the USA
  53. Thoughts and behaviors of women with symptoms of acute coronary syndrome
  54. Incidence and predictors of postdischarge nausea and vomiting in a 7-day population
  55. Multivariate analysis of predictors of pre-hospital delay in acute coronary syndrome
  56. How Enhancing Self-Care in Patients with Heart Failure Can Avert a Healthcare Crisis
  57. A Comprehensive Symptom Diary Intervention to Improve Outcomes in Patients With HF: A Pilot Study
  58. Less Than 2g of Daily Sodium Intake Independently Predict Higher Micronutrient Deficiency in Patients with Heart Failure
  59. Depressive Symptoms Have a Role in the Relationship between Inflammation and Physical Symptoms in Patients with Heart Failure
  60. Prospective Evaluation of the Association between Depressive Symptoms and Heart Failure Symptom Severity Using Latent Growth Modeling
  61. What Should We Tell Patients with Heart Failure about Sodium Restriction and How Should We Counsel Them?
  62. Measuring job satisfaction of advanced nurse practitioners and advanced midwife practitioners in the Republic of Ireland: a survey
  63. Comparison of self-care behaviors of heart failure patients in 15 countries worldwide
  64. Medication Adherence, Depressive Symptoms, and Cardiac Event–Free Survival in Patients With Heart Failure
  65. Limited Association Between Perceived Control and Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients With Heart Failure
  66. Antidepressants do not improve event-free survival in patients with heart failure when depressive symptoms remain
  67. Moderating Effect of Psychosocial Factors for Dyspnea in Taiwanese and American Heart Failure Patients
  68. DOES AGE CHANGE THE EFFECT OF DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS ON MORTALITY IN PATIENTS WITH CORONARY HEART DISEASE?
  69. Nutrition intervention to decrease symptoms in patients with advanced heart failure
  70. Anxiolytic medication use is not associated with anxiety level and does not reduce complications after acute myocardial infarction
  71. Editorial
  72. 20 Things You Didn’t Know About Heart Failure
  73. Bringing Balance to Institutional Review Board Oversight in Human Subject Research
  74. Conceptualization of a Research Study: An Exemplar
  75. Medication adherence, social support, and event-free survival in patients with heart failure.
  76. Gendered symptom presentation in acute coronary syndrome: A cross sectional analysis
  77. Improving Self Care Behavior and Clinical Outcomes in Rural Patients with Heart Failure
  78. Are there symptom differences in patients with coronary artery disease presenting to the ED ultimately diagnosed with or without ACS?
  79. Perceived social support predicted quality of life in patients with heart failure, but the effect is mediated by depressive symptoms
  80. Can We Identify Patients With Low Levels of Knowledge about Heart Failure (HF) and Poor Self-Care Behaviors?
  81. The Relationships between Uric Acid and Inflammatory Markers Differ between Heart Failure Patients With and Without Central Obesity
  82. Ethnicity, Functional Cass, Depression, Anxiety, and Perceived Control are Predictors of Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients With Heart Failure
  83. Perceived Benefits of, but not Barriers to, Following a Low Sodium Diet Predict Long-Term Adherence in Patients With Heart Failure
  84. The Impact of Nutritional Risk on Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients With Heart Failure beyond Daily Sodium Intake
  85. Perceived Control Predicts Perceptions of Positive Changes in Life as a Result of Caring for a Patient with Heart Failure
  86. Superior Perceived Control Comes With Improved Health Related Quality of Life in Younger Heart Failure Patients
  87. Randomized Controlled Trial of a Biobehavioral Intervention for Depression in Patients With Heart Failure
  88. The impact on anxiety and perceived control of a short one-on-one nursing intervention designed to decrease treatment seeking delay in people with coronary heart disease
  89. Association of Physical Versus Affective Depressive Symptoms With Cardiac Event–Free Survival in Patients With Heart Failure
  90. Role of Self-Care in the Patient with Heart Failure
  91. Medication adherence mediates the relationship between marital status and cardiac event-free survival in patients with heart failure
  92. Complications after acute coronary syndrome are reduced by perceived control of cardiac illness
  93. Cognitive Therapy Improves Three-Month Outcomes in Hospitalized Patients With Heart Failure
  94. Slow-Onset Myocardial Infarction and Its Influence on Help-Seeking Behaviors
  95. Effect of a Medication-Taking Behavior Feedback Theory–Based Intervention on Outcomes in Patients With Heart Failure
  96. Relationship Between Self-care and Health-Related Quality of Life in Older Adults With Moderate to Advanced Heart Failure
  97. The Psychometric Properties of the Brief Symptom Inventory Depression and Anxiety Subscales in Patients With Heart Failure and With or Without Renal Dysfunction
  98. Assessing Health Literacy in Heart Failure Patients
  99. Relationship of Persistent Symptoms of Anxiety to Morbidity and Mortality Outcomes in Patients With Coronary Heart Disease
  100. Depressive symptoms and poor social support have a synergistic effect on event-free survival in patients with heart failure
  101. Who listens to our advice? A secondary analysis of data from a clinical trial testing an intervention designed to decrease delay in seeking treatment for acute coronary syndrome
  102. Linkages between anxiety and outcomes in heart failure
  103. Depressive Symptom Trajectory Predicts 1-Year Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients With Heart Failure
  104. What Type of Social Support Do Heart Failure Patients Need?
  105. Bio-Feedback Relaxation Intervention Improve Heart Failure Patients' Long-Term Disease Outcomes
  106. Quality of Life and Family Function Are Poorest When Both Patients with Heart Failure and Their Caregivers Depressed
  107. Regular Monitoring of Lower Extremity Edema Predicts Cardiac Event-Free Survival in Patients with Heart Failure
  108. Effects of Depression on Sexual Activity and Sexual Satisfaction in Heart Failure
  109. Biomarkers of Myocardial Stress and Systemic Inflammation in Patients Who Engage in Heart Failure Self-care Management
  110. Symptom Variability, Not Severity, Predicts Rehospitalization and Mortality in Patients with Heart Failure
  111. A review of interventions aimed at reducing pre-hospital delay time in acute coronary syndrome: what has worked and why?
  112. Gender-specific characteristics of individuals with depressive symptoms and coronary heart disease
  113. Developing a shortened measure of negative thinking for use in patients with heart failure
  114. Impact of Prehospital Delay in Treatment Seeking on In-Hospital Complications After Acute Myocardial Infarction
  115. Three Gram Sodium Intake is Associated With Longer Event-Free Survival Only in Patients With Advanced Heart Failure
  116. From Novice to Expert
  117. Spielberger's State Anxiety Inventory: Development of a Shortened Version for Critically Ill Patients
  118. Disease Management in Heart Failure
  119. Event-free survival in adults with heart failure who engage in self-care management
  120. Persistent comorbid symptoms of depression and anxiety predict mortality in heart disease
  121. Rurality and event-free survival in patients with heart failure
  122. Predictors of Depressive Symptoms in Caregivers of Patients With Heart Failure
  123. Comparison of prevalence of symptoms of depression, anxiety, and hostility in elderly patients with heart failure, myocardial infarction, and a coronary artery bypass graft
  124. Symptom Status of Obese Patients with Heart Failure
  125. Medication Adherence, Perceived Social Support, and Event-Free Survival in Patients With Heart Failure
  126. Relaxation Biofeedback Intervention in Patients With Heart Failure: Results from a Randomized, Controlled, Single-Blind Trial
  127. Trends in Dyspnea Predict 12-Month Outcomes in Patients With Heart Failure
  128. Symptom Clusters Predict Event-Free Survival in Patients With Heart Failure
  129. Depressive Symptoms Affect the Relationship of N-Terminal Pro B-Type Natriuretic Peptide to Cardiac Event-Free Survival in Patients With Heart Failure
  130. Symptom Clusters in Men and Women With Heart Failure and Their Impact on Cardiac Event-Free Survival
  131. Theory-Based Low-Sodium Diet Education for Heart Failure Patients
  132. Differences in mortality in acute coronary syndrome symptom clusters
  133. Qualitative examination of compliance in heart failure patients in The Netherlands
  134. Evidence That the Brief Symptom Inventory Can Be Used to Measure Anxiety Quickly and Reliably in Patients Hospitalized for Acute Myocardial Infarction
  135. Medication Adherence is a Mediator of the Relationship Between Ethnicity and Event-Free Survival in Patients With Heart Failure
  136. Heart failure patients' perceptions on nutrition and dietary adherence
  137. Smoking Among Women Following Heart Transplantation: Should We Be Concerned?
  138. Depressive symptoms and outcomes in patients with heart failure: data from the COACH study
  139. Improvement in Health-related Quality of Life After Hospitalization Predicts Event-free Survival in Patients With Advanced Heart Failure
  140. Gender differences in heart failure self-care: A multinational cross-sectional study
  141. Anxiety and Depression in Ethnic Minorities With Chronic Heart Failure
  142. Heart Failure Self-care in Developed and Developing Countries
  143. Predictors of Adherence to a Low Sodium Diet Using the Theory of Planned Behavior in Patients with Heart Failure
  144. Adherence to the Low Sodium Diet in Patients with Heart Failure Is Best When Family Members Also Follow the Diet
  145. Relationship between Inflammatory Biomarkers and Symptom Perception in Patients with Heart Failure
  146. Are PHQ-9 and PHQ-2 Depression Score Cutoffs the Best Cutoffs for Determining Significant Depression in Pts with HF and Mild-Moderate Symptoms?
  147. A Quick Fix: Can PHQ-2 Be Used Clinically to Diagnose Depression in Patients with Heart Failure?
  148. Psychosocial Factors Moderate the Relationship between Clinical Status and Dyspnea in Both Taiwanese and American Heart Failure Patients
  149. Comparison of the Impact of PHQ-9 Scores with and without Physical Symptom Items on Event-Free Survival in Patients with Heart Failure
  150. Depressive Symptoms, Poor Nutritional Intake and Event-Free Survival in Patients with Heart Failure: A Deadly Chain of Events
  151. The effect of a short one-on-one nursing intervention on knowledge, attitudes and beliefs related to response to acute coronary syndrome in people with coronary heart disease: A randomized controlled trial
  152. Symptom clusters of heart failure
  153. Depressive symptoms increase risk of rehospitalisation in heart failure patients with preserved systolic function
  154. The effects of depressive symptoms and anxiety on quality of life in patients with heart failure and their spouses: Testing dyadic dynamics using Actor–Partner Interdependence Model
  155. Risk Factors as Predictors of Sexual Activity in Heart Failure
  156. Quality of life in patients with heart failure: Ask the patients
  157. Demonstration of psychometric soundness of the Dietary Sodium Restriction Questionnaire in patients with heart failure
  158. Defining an evidence-based cutpoint for medication adherence in heart failure
  159. The Control Attitudes Scale-Revised
  160. Correlates of Fatigue in Patients With Heart Failure
  161. Relationship of Heart Failure Patients' Knowledge, Perceived Barriers, and Attitudes Regarding Low-Sodium Diet Recommendations to Adherence
  162. Gender differences in and factors related to self-care behaviors: A cross-sectional, correlational study of patients with heart failure
  163. Predictors of Medication Adherence Using a Multidimensional Adherence Model in Patients With Heart Failure
  164. Changes in Depression in the Immediate Postdischarge Phase in a Cardiac Rehabilitation Population Assessed by the Cardiac Depression Scale
  165. Sexual self-concept, anxiety, and self-efficacy predict sexual activity in heart failure and healthy elders
  166. Testing the psychometric properties of the Medication Adherence Scale in patients with heart failure
  167. Reduction in asthma-related emergency department visits after implementation of a smoke-free law
  168. The Association of Perceived Control to Adherence in Heart Failure
  169. Factors Influencing Health Status among Thai Patients with Heart Failure
  170. Does the Accuracy of HF Illness Beliefs Affect Emergency Care, Hospitalization or Mortality?
  171. How Painful IS Advanced Heart Failure? Results from PAIN-HF
  172. Self-Care Behaviors, Symptom Status, and Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients with Heart Failure
  173. Health-Related Quality of Life of Patients with Heart Failure Is Worse in Americans Compared to Taiwanese
  174. The Relationship among Depressive Symptoms, N-Terminal pro B Type Natriuretic Peptide, and Cardiac Events in Patients with Heart Failure
  175. Perceived Social Support Predicted Quality of Life in Patients with Heart Failure but the Effect Is Mediated by Depressive Symptoms
  176. Medication Adherence Mediates the Relationship between Ethnicity and Event-Free Survival in Patients with Heart Failure
  177. Conceptualizing Self-care in Heart Failure
  178. Objectively Measured, but Not Self-Reported, Medication Adherence Independently Predicts Event-Free Survival in Patients With Heart Failure
  179. Preface
  180. Gender Differences in Knowledge, Attitudes, and Beliefs About Heart Disease
  181. Medication Adherence in Patients Who Have Heart Failure: a Review of the Literature
  182. Patients Differ in Their Ability to Self-Monitor Adherence to a Low-Sodium Diet Versus Medication
  183. Correlates of Fatigue in Patients With Heart Failure
  184. Factors influencing medication adherence in patients with heart failure
  185. Relationship of Heart Failure Patients' Knowledge, Perceived Barriers, and Attitudes Regarding Low-Sodium Diet Recommendations to Adherence
  186. Effectiveness of Use of Nutrition Screening Checklist in Patients with Heart Failure
  187. Predictors of Medication Adherence Using a Multidimensional Adherence Model in Patients with Heart Failure
  188. The Effects of Depressive Symptoms and Anxiety on Quality of Life: Testing Dyadic Dynamics Using Actor-Partner Interdependence Model
  189. Inflammatory Profiles Are Different in Heart Failure Patients with and without COPD
  190. Unraveling the mechanisms for heart failure patients’ beliefs about compliance
  191. A Practical Use of Theory to Study Adherence
  192. Is Severity of Chest Pain a Cue for Women and Men to Recognize Acute Myocardial Infarction Symptoms as Cardiac in Origin?
  193. Cultural diversity In heart failure management: Findings from the Discover Study (Part 2)
  194. Symptom Clusters in Acute Myocardial Infarction
  195. Prediction of Rehospitalization and Death in Severe Heart Failure by Physicians and Nurses of the ESCAPE Trial
  196. Acute Coronary Syndrome Response Index
  197. Impact of Anxiety and Perceived Control on In-Hospital Complications After Acute Myocardial Infarction
  198. Psychometric evaluation of the acute coronary syndrome (ACS) response index
  199. Dietary Sodium in Heart Failure: What to Tell Your Patients
  200. A comparison of health-related quality of life between older adults with heart failure and healthy older adults
  201. Evidence-Based Interventions for Post Discharge Nausea and Vomiting: A Review of the Literature
  202. Prevalence of myocardial ischemia during mechanical ventilation and weaning and its effects on weaning success
  203. Impact of obesity on quality of life and depression in patients with heart failure
  204. Gender Differences in Adherence to the Sodium-Restricted Diet in Patients With Heart Failure
  205. Presence of a Spouse Improves Adherence to Medication in Patients with Heart Failure
  206. What Factors Increase Anxiety and Depression in Advanced Heart Failure?
  207. Symptom Clusters in Acute Heart Failure
  208. Comparison of Nutritional Intake and Nutritional Status among Patients with Heart Failure and Similarly-Aged Healthy Elders
  209. A Nursing Intervention to Reduce Prehospital Delay in Acute Coronary Syndrome
  210. Nonpharmacologic Care by Heart Failure Experts
  211. Factors Influencing Food Intake in Patients With Heart Failure
  212. Usefulness of a Home-Based Exercise Program for Overweight and Obese Patients With Advanced Heart Failure
  213. Vulnerabilities of patients recovering from an exacerbation of chronic heart failure
  214. Dietary Fat Intake and Proinflammatory Cytokine Levels in Patients With Heart Failure
  215. Predictors of Health Status for Heart Failure Patients
  216. Physical Activity Patterns in Heart Transplant Women
  217. Depression and Anxiety in Heart Failure
  218. Testing the Psychometric Properties of the Minnesota Living With Heart Failure Questionnaire
  219. Testing a Published Model of Health-Related Quality of Life in Heart Failure
  220. Using a 0-10 Scale for Assessment of Anxiety in Patients With Acute Myocardial Infarction
  221. The Importance and Impact of Social Support on Outcomes in Patients With Heart Failure
  222. Two-year follow-up of quality of life in patients referred for heart transplant
  223. Patients with heart failure who die in hospice
  224. Depression, Anxiety, And Heart Failure: A Review
  225. Gender differences in reasons patients delay in seeking treatment for acute myocardial infarction symptoms
  226. Anxiety, Depression, and Functional Status are the Best Predictors of Health Status for Patients with Heart Failure
  227. Emotional well-being in spouses of patients with advanced heart failure
  228. A case for consideration of cultural diversity in heart failure management ‐ Part 1: Rationale for the DISCOVER Study
  229. Self-care practices of hispanics with heart failure
  230. Psychometric testing of the self-care of heart failure index
  231. The hidden reason for patients' nonadherence to low sodium diet recommendations
  232. Women are more adherent to low sodium diet recommendations than men
  233. Anxiety, depression, and functional status are the best predictors of health status for patients with heart failure
  234. Is coping style linked to emotional states in heart failure patients?
  235. Role of Spousal Anxiety and Depression in Patientsʼ Psychosocial Recovery After a Cardiac Event
  236. Functional status and perceived control influence quality of life in female heart transplant recipients
  237. A cross-sectional examination of changes in anxiety early after acute myocardial infarction
  238. Caring for the Heart Failure Patient
  239. Anxiety and heart disease
  240. Using a 0-10 scale for assessment of anxiety in patients with acute myocardial infarction
  241. Anxiety is not manifested by elevated heart rate and blood pressure in acutely ill cardiac patients
  242. Intrauterine growth retardation in full-term newborn infants with birth weights greater than 2,500 g
  243. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin ii receptor blockers: what we know and current controversies
  244. Effects of Gender and Preference for Information and Control on Anxiety Early After Myocardial Infarction
  245. Low sodium diet: nutritional adequacy and factors limiting adherence
  246. Following a sodium restricted diet: attitudes and barriers
  247. Characteristics of heart failure patients who received hospice care at the end of life
  248. Symptoms and Symptom Management of Patients with Heart Failure Who Die While Receiving Hospice Care
  249. An International Perspective on the Time to Treatment for Acute Myocardial Infarction
  250. Critical care nursing practice regarding patient anxiety assessment and management
  251. Management of anxiety after acute myocardial infarction: Reply
  252. An International Perspective on Gender Differences in Anxiety Early After Acute Myocardial Infarction
  253. Gender differences in quality of life are minimal in patients with heart failure
  254. "A five-country comparison of anxiety early after myocardial infarction"
  255. "A Cross-Sectional Examination of Changes in Anxiety Early After Acute Myocardial Infarction"
  256. Perceived control reduces emotional stress in patients with heart failure
  257. Management of anxiety after acute myocardial infarction
  258. Can We Talk? Developing a Social Support Nursing Intervention for Couples
  259. The Minnesota Living With Heart Failure Questionnaire
  260. Self-care abilities of patients with heart failure
  261. Biobehavioral characteristics of infants with failure to thrive
  262. Cardiac Power Output during Transition from Mechanical to Spontaneous Ventilation in Canines
  263. A controlled trial of cardiopulmonary resuscitation training for ethnically diverse parents of infants at high risk for cardiopulmonary arrest
  264. Correlates of Anxiety, Hostility, Depression, and Psychosocial Adjustment in Parents of NICU Infants
  265. Effect of Psychosocial Factors on Physiologic Outcomes in Patients with Heart Failure
  266. Treatment-seeking behavior for acute myocardial infarction symptoms in North America and Australia
  267. Factors Differentiating Dropouts from Completers in a Longitudinal, Multicenter Clinical Trial
  268. Impact of cardiopulmonary resuscitation training on perceived control in spouses of recovering cardiac patients
  269. Comparison of Psychosocial Adjustment of Mothers and Fathers of High-Risk Infants in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
  270. Evidence of Time-Dependent Autonomic Reinnervation After Heart Transplantation
  271. Effect of cardiopulmonary resuscitation training for parents of high-risk neonates on perceived anxiety, control, and burden
  272. Foreword
  273. Do apnea monitors decrease emotional distress in parents of infants at high risk for cardoopulmonary arrest?
  274. Comparison of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Training Methods for Parents of Infants at High Risk for Cardiopulmonary Arrest
  275. Pathophysiology of Heart Failure Update: The Role of Neurohumoral Activation in the Progression of Heart Failure
  276. Kathleen Dracup, Mentor Extraordinaire
  277. Beyond sociodemographics: Factors influencing the decision to seek treatment for symptoms of acute myocardial infarction
  278. Correcting Misconceptions About Women and Heart Disease
  279. CE Credit: Correcting Misconceptions about Women and Heart Disease
  280. Hemodynamic adaptation to orthostatic stress after orthotopic heart transplantation
  281. Maximizing therapy in the advanced heart failure patient
  282. Women's decision to seek care for symptoms of acute myocardial infarction
  283. Psychosocial recovery from a cardiac event: The influence of perceived control
  284. Causes of delay in seeking treatment for heart attack symptoms
  285. Genital tract abnormalities and female sexual function impairment in systemic sclerosis
  286. Natural Killer Cell Anergy to Cytokine Stimulants in a Subgroup of Patients with Heart Failure: Relationship to Norepinephrine
  287. Social support and cardiac recovery
  288. The relationship of marital quality and psychosocial adjustment to heart disease
  289. Timing of sudden death in patients with heart failure
  290. Complex heart rate variability and serum norepinephrine levels in patients with advanced heart failure
  291. Predictors of psychosocial adjustment in systemic sclerosis
  292. Predicting death from progressive heart failure secondary to ischemic or idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy
  293. Needs of recovering cardiac patients and their spouses: compared views
  294. Significance of aborted cardiac arrest and sustained ventricular tachycardia in patients referred for treatment therapy of advanced heart failure
  295. Effects of a Multidimensional Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation Program on Psychosocial Function
  296. Patterns of beat-to-beat heart rate variability in advanced heart failure
  297. Optimal late potential criteria for reducing false positive signal-averaged electrocardiograms
  298. Late potentials are unaltered by ventricular filling pressure reduction in heart failure
  299. Signal-averaged electrocardiography
  300. Effects of a multidimensional cardiopulmonary rehabilitation program on psychosocial function
  301. Letters to the editor
  302. Frequency of late potentials in systemic sclerosis
  303. Relation of primary and secondary cardiac arrests or sustained ventricular tachycardia to sudden death risk in advanced heart failure
  304. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation skills retention in family members of cardiac patients
  305. Comparison of frequency of late potentials in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy and ischemic cardiomyopathy with advanced congestive heart failure and their usefulness in predicting sudden death
  306. Is health care racist?
  307. Depressive symptoms among physically abused and psychiatrically disturbed children.
  308. End-of-life care in the acute heart failure patient
  309. Cardiac denial and delay in treatment for myocardial infarction.