Introduction: Psychological and lifestyle factors affect the development and outcome of heart disease considerably.
Aim: The aims of the authors were to examine health control, level of anxiety and depression and to analyse their relationship with health behaviour in patients with ischemic heart disease.
Method: The present cross-sectional study involved 116 patients who took part in residential cardiac rehabilitation (56.9% men, mean age: 57.65±8.22 years).
Results: 30.9% of the patients reported elevated anxiety and 21.9% increased depressive symptomatology. Social-external control belief was the strongest among respondents. Further, anxiety and depression were negatively associated with healthy diet and the frequency of exercise. Patients with stronger social-external control beliefs were more likely to seek medical attention if they suspected a disease.
Conclusions: It is important to assess psychological risk factors linked to cardiovascular diseases in cardiac rehabilitation departments and to initiate psychological interventions if indicated.
Keywords: anxiety; depression; depresszió; egészség-magatartás; egészségkontrollhit; health behaviour; health-related control beliefs; ischaemiás szívbetegség; ischemic heart disease; szorongás.