Journal of Educational, Health and Community Psychology
VOL 15 NO 2 JUNE 2026

Self-Regulation Interventions for Enhancing Self-Care Outcomes in Patients with Coronary Heart Disease: A Systematic Review

Israh Israh (Master’s Program in Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Universitas Indonesia)
Tuti Herawati (Master’s Program in Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Universitas Indonesia)
Muhammad Adam (Master’s Program in Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Universitas Indonesia)



Article Info

Publish Date
31 May 2026

Abstract

Background: Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) remains a major contributor to global morbidity and mortality, requiring long-term self-care management following hospital discharge. Self-regulation has emerged as an important cognitive-behavioral framework that strengthens patients’ autonomy, symptom monitoring, and adherence to health-related behaviors. Objective: This systematic review aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of self-regulation programs in improving self-care among post-discharge patients with CHD. Methods: A systematic review was conducted following the PRISMA guidelines. Literature searches were performed across five electronic databases, including PubMed, ClinicalKey Nursing, ScienceDirect, SAGE Journals, and ProQuest, covering publications from 2022 to 2025. Eligible studies were randomized controlled trials (RCTs) involving CHD patients receiving self-regulation-based interventions targeting self-care outcomes. Ten RCTs met the inclusion criteria, involving 668 participants in intervention groups and 665 participants in control groups. Results: The findings consistently demonstrated that self-regulation interventions, including digital and telehealth-based monitoring, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), goal-setting strategies, and family-supported approaches, significantly improved medication adherence, physical activity, symptom management, self-care behaviors, and quality of life. Technology-assisted interventions and family involvement showed particularly strong effects in promoting sustained self-management. Conclusion: Self-regulation programs are effective in enhancing self-care and health-related outcomes among patients with CHD after hospitalization. Integrating technology-based monitoring and family-centered support into cardiac rehabilitation programs may strengthen long-term disease management and reduce adverse clinical outcomes.

Copyrights © 2026






Journal Info

Abbrev

Psychology

Publisher

Subject

Education Public Health

Description

Journal of Educational, Health, and Community Psychology (JEHCP) published an article, and empirical study that have originality, novelty and fill the gap of knowledge, that focused on educational psychology, health psychology and community psychology. JEHCP is an open access peer reviewed, ...