Cardiology
META ANALYSIS
● Meta-analysis
Qualitative synthesis identifies four themes in dyadic coping experiences for chronic heart failure
Frontiers in Medicine
Published April 1, 2026
DOI ↗
This qualitative meta-synthesis analyzed 16 studies exploring the experiences and support needs of chronic heart failure patients and their informal caregivers during dyadic coping. The synthesis aggregated 55 findings into 13 categories, which were then organized into four overarching themes: divergent perspectives on illness and care, depletion of psychological resources, tension in family intimacy, and the need for multidimensional support to reconstruct personal meaning.
No specific intervention or comparator was examined; the research focused on synthesizing qualitative experiences rather than testing treatments. The synthesis did not report quantitative outcomes, effect sizes, or statistical measures, reflecting its qualitative nature.
The authors suggest healthcare professionals should pay attention to differences in thinking, psychological resource depletion, family intimacy tension, and supportive needs during dyadic coping. They propose that individualized interventions could be developed, potentially leveraging digital technologies to enhance collaborative disease management. However, this practice relevance is based on qualitative themes rather than evidence of intervention effectiveness.
Key limitations include the qualitative synthesis design, which cannot establish causation or quantify effects. The certainty of evidence is limited to descriptive themes from included studies. No safety or tolerability data were reported, as the synthesis did not evaluate specific interventions.
Researchers wanted to understand the shared experience of living with chronic heart failure. They looked at 16 existing qualitative studies that interviewed patients and their informal caregivers, like family members. The goal was to learn about the challenges they face together and what kind of support they feel they need.
The analysis found four main themes. First, patients and caregivers often have different views on the illness and care. Second, both can feel emotionally and mentally drained. Third, the strain can create tension in family closeness. Finally, there is a strong need for various types of support to help rebuild a sense of purpose and manage the disease as a team.
This study did not report any safety concerns because it was about gathering experiences, not testing a treatment. The main reason to be careful is that this research only describes feelings and perceptions. It does not provide numbers on how well any specific support program works. Readers should see this as a helpful map of the challenges faced by these families, which can guide future research into creating better support systems.
What this means for you: Research maps the shared emotional challenges of heart failure for patients and caregivers, highlighting where future support is needed.
View Original Abstract ↓
ObjectivesTo systematically evaluate the experiences of chronic heart failure patients and their informal caregivers in jointly managing the disease, clarify their support needs, and provide evidence for developing targeted interventions.DesignA qualitative meta-synthesis.MethodsWe systematically searched PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, CNKI, Wanfang, and VIP for qualitative studies examining the dyadic coping experiences of patients with chronic heart failure and their caregivers. The quality of the literature was evaluated according to the JBI Critical Appraisal Checklist for Qualitative Research, and the included literature was integrated and analyzed using the pooled integration approach.ResultsA total of 16 studies were included. 55 findings were aggregated into 13 categories and further synthesized into 4 overarching themes: divergent perspectives on illness and care; psychosocial resource depletion; disruptions in family intimacy; and the need for multidimensional support to reconstruct personal meaning.ConclusionsHealthcare professionals should pay close attention to differences in thinking, the degree of depletion of psychological resources, the tension in family intimacy, and supportive needs during the dyadic coping process between patients with chronic heart failure and their caregivers. Based on this, individualized interventions can be developed, leveraging digital technologies and platforms to enrich intervention formats and content, thereby enhancing collaborative disease management between both parties.Systematic Review Registrationhttps://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/view/CRD420251243342, CRD 420251243342.