Impact of Mental Health on Post-Operative Recovery in Cardiac Patients: A Multi-Disciplinary Approach
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63075/33fzgw50Abstract
The increased awareness of the mind-heart relationship has changed the concept of cardiac recovery. The previous evidence demonstrates that the psychological disorders like depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are not the indirect complications but the primary outcome determinants following cardiac surgery. Patients with psychological suffering have a slow recovery, more complications, and they are more likely to readmission. However, the integration of mental health in the cardiac care is still not sufficient because of stigma, lack of training, and systemic challenges. This review demonstrates the need to have a multidisciplinary model that brings together cardiologists, psychologists, nurses, and social workers to deal with both physical and emotional aspects of healing. Early screening of mental health through standardized methods such as PHQ-9 and GAD-7 have been seen to increase adherence and reduce the hospital stay. Besides, new digital interventions, such as mobile-based CBT, tele-counseling, wearable monitoring, further expand the availability of mental health support to institutions outside the hospital and at a lower cost. The evidence suggests that an immediate change is needed to incorporate psychological evaluation and treatment into the cardiac pathways. An all-inclusive cardiac care system should not only fix the failing heart but also the troubled mind - since healing can be achieved only when the two hearts beat in tune.
Keywords: Cardiac Surgery, Post-operative Recovery, Mental Health, Depression, Anxiety, Psychological Resilience, Stress Management, Digital Health Intervention, Rehabilitation.