Farhane-Medina, Naima ZCastillo-Mayen, RosarioTabernero, CarmenRubio, Sebastian JGutierrez-Domingo, TamaraCuadrado, EstherArenas, AliciaLuque, Barbara2023-05-032023-05-032022-09-14Farhane-Medina NZ, Castillo-Mayén R, Tabernero C, Rubio SJ, Gutiérrez-Domingo T, Cuadrado E, et al. Effectiveness of an eHealth intervention to improve subjective well-being and self-efficacy in cardiovascular disaease patients: A pilot non-randomized controlled trial. Nurs Open. 2023 Mar;10(3):1503-1516http://hdl.handle.net/10668/22372To evaluate the effectiveness of a multicomponent, eHealth-based self-efficacy intervention to promote subjective well-being and self-efficacy in patients with cardiovascular disease, exploring sex differences. A pilot study of a two-arm non-randomized controlled trial. Forty-two cardiovascular patients (31% women) participated in the study. The experimental group received a personalized psychoeducational session and a 14-days eHealth intervention. Subjective well-being (positive and negative affect) and self-efficacy (chronic and cardiac) were assessed at baseline, post-psychoeducational session, post-eHealth intervention and at two follow-ups. The levels of the experimental group in positive affect, at post-eHealth and follow-up 1, and self-efficacy, at post-eHealth, and both follow-ups, were statistically significantly higher compared to the control group (all ps < .05). When considering sex, the intervention was effective only for men. The results highlight the potential of eHealth interventions for cardiac patients and underline the importance of considering a gender perspective in their treatment.enAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internationalhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Cardiovascular diseaseeHealthNursingSelf-efficacySex differencesSubjective well-beingHumansMaleFemaleSelf efficacyPilot projectsVisceraTelemedicineEffectiveness of an eHealth intervention to improve subjective well-being and self-efficacy in cardiovascular disaease patients: A pilot non-randomized controlled trial.research article36208471open accessAutoeficaciaProyectos pilotoTelemedicinaVísceras10.1002/nop2.14002054-1058PMC9912451https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdfdirect/10.1002/nop2.1400https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9912451/pdf