RT Journal Article T1 Recognizing a Heart Attack: Patients' Knowledge of Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Its Relation to Prehospital Decision Delay in Acute Coronary Syndrome A1 Garrido, Dunia A1 Petrova, Dafina A1 Catena, Andrés A1 Ramírez-Hernández, José Antonio A1 Garcia-Retamero, Rocio K1 Acute coronary syndrome K1 Patient decision making K1 Prehospital delay K1 Knowledge K1 Decision delay K1 Heart attack K1 Cardiovascular risk K1 Síndrome coronario agudo K1 Toma de decisiones K1 Técnicas de apoyo para la decisión K1 Conocimiento K1 Infarto del miocardio K1 Factores de riesgo para la enfermedad cardiaca AB In acute coronary syndromes (ACSs), longer decision delay - the time patients wait before seeking medical attention after symptoms have started - increases the risk of complications and death. However, many patients wait much longer than recommended and research is needed investigating how patient decision delay can be reduced. In a cross-sectional study of 120 ACS survivors, we investigated the relationship between knowledge of cardiovascular risk factors and decision delay. Several days after the onset of a cardiac event, patients completed a questionnaire measuring demographics, decision delay, objective knowledge of cardiovascular risks factors and of ACS symptoms, and subjective perceptions of symptoms during the cardiac episode. Relevant clinical data were extracted from patients' medical records. In a multiple linear regression analysis, controlling for demographic and clinical factors, objective knowledge of cardiovascular risk factors and ACS symptoms, and subjective attributions of symptoms to a cardiac cause were related to shorter decision delays. Among patients with relatively high knowledge of risk factors, only 5% waited more than 1 h to seek help, compared to 22% among patients with relatively low knowledge. These results suggest that knowledge of the factors that increase the risk of developing cardiovascular disease could play a role in patient decision making during an acute cardiac event. We discuss methodological issues and potential underlying mechanisms related to decision heuristics and biases, which can inform future research. PB Frontiers YR 2020 FD 2020-08-25 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/4257 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/4257 LA en NO Garrido D, Petrova D, Catena A, Ramírez-Hernández JA, Garcia-Retamero R. Recognizing a Heart Attack: Patients' Knowledge of Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Its Relation to Prehospital Decision Delay in Acute Coronary Syndrome. Front Psychol. 2020 Aug 25;11:2056 DS RISalud RD Apr 5, 2025