International Journal of Cardiology Congenital Heart Disease (Jun 2023)

Definitions of resilience and resilience resource use as described by adults with congenital heart disease

  • Jill M. Steiner,
  • Erin Abu-Rish Blakeney,
  • Andrea Corage Baden,
  • Vea Freeman,
  • Joyce Yi-Frazier,
  • J. Randall Curtis,
  • Ruth A. Engelberg,
  • Abby R. Rosenberg

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
p. 100447

Abstract

Read online

Structured Abstract: Background: Adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) is a lifelong illness that presents ongoing challenges to quality of life. Fostering personal resilience resources to sustain well-being can enhance patients’ psychosocial health. Objective: We aimed to describe patients’ resilience experiences: how they understand, develop, and utilize resilience resources in managing ACHD. Methods: We conducted a qualitative study of patients with ACHD. Participants were recruited using maximum variation sampling. Individual, semi-structured interviews were conducted June 2020 to August 2021. We queried approaches to managing ACHD-related stress and experiences with resilience and analyzed responses with thematic analysis. Results: Participant (N = 25) median age was 32 years (range 22–44); 52% identified as female and 72% non-Hispanic white. Participants’ anatomic ACHD was moderate (56%) or complex (44%); physiologically, 76% were functional class C or D. Participants described various resilience resources, which map to an established resilience framework: 1) internal resources: maintaining positivity, self-directed activity, and setting goals; 2) external resources: social support; 3) existential resources: purpose, gratitude, and cultivating health. Even among participants who reported feeling unfamiliar (8/25) with the term “resilience,” all participants shared experiences reflecting resilience developed while living with ACHD. Conclusion: ACHD-relevant resilience resources may help patients and clinicians navigate ACHD-related stress and promote psychosocial well-being.

Keywords