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TAKING ADVANTAGE OF CARDIAC REHABILITATION
Cardiac rehabilitation should be just as much a part of the recovery process in the case of heart attack, bypass surgery, or other heart surgery as physical therapy would be after a body injury. The very definition of purpose of cardiac rehabilitation is very upbeat: to prevent future heart attacks, to prolong life, and to improve its quality. The medical community is ambitiously optimistic in this regard. Compare even the term with that used in France: Cardiac readaptation implies a far more cautious approach, a certain degree of surrender to the disease. We just make the assumption that every uncomplicated case of heart attack or surgery will have a successful outcome and that every patient can and should be a winner.
This is one time that you can and should close the barn door after the horse has run away. It’s almost never too late. We now have the programs at our disposal to facilitate an almost miraculous recovery from heart disease, to get that horse right back into the barn, as it were.
That was not the case back in 1978 when I had my heart attack and first bypass surgery. As I’ve said earlier, I was released with the flimsiest kind of advice and counsel: walk more and take it easy. I had no idea how much was enough or too much exercise. How much exertion would be dangerous? Which activities could pose problems? Those questions formed only the tip of the iceberg of my concern. The result was a level of depression, anxiety and virtually neurotic attitude that today is termed the “cardiac cripple”.
Compare that with my experience in 1984. Following my second bypass procedure I entered the cardiac rehabilitation program at Santa Monica Hospital Medical Center. My progress was dramatic. This time I had the guidance I needed. My confidence grew daily. And I was learning about the lifestyle modifications I’d need to make a spectacular recovery. That’s just what I wanted: a spectacular recovery. And I got it.
*65/85/2*



