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Surprisingly, only 18 percent of study participants went to all 36 sessions, even though Medicare -- the government health care program for those 65 and over -- was footing the bill. Researchers don't know why so few stuck with it.
"It can be everything from the time required multiple times a week for so long, or transportation issues. Or it may just be that they feel better and don't feel the need to finish," Hammill said.
That's the case with Tony Rugare, an 84-year-old Cleveland area man who had a quadruple bypass operation in October. He attended his fourth rehab class on Monday and plans to do only a dozen more.
"It's a hassle getting here and parking," he said. Once he's had 16 classes, "by that time I think I know what to do and can go on my own."
However, it could be that sicker patients drop out of rehab sooner, Dr. William Weintraub wrote in an editorial in the journal. He is a heart specialist at Christiana Care Health System in Newark, Del. Because the study can't account for why people went to fewer or more sessions, it cannot prove that rehab alone accounted for better survival, he wrote.
But there's good reason to believe it did: researchers did a separate analysis on only folks who went to at least six sessions and still saw the trend of fewer heart attacks and deaths with greater attendance.
Dorothy Roberts went to her seventh session at the Cleveland Clinic on Monday. She walks on a treadmill and is trying to quit smoking. Roberts, 62, said that her artery-opening angioplasty procedure was a "very scary" experience, so she plans to complete all 36 rehab sessions covered by her private insurer.
"If you have a second chance at life, you do what you can to stay here," she said.
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