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What Is Phase 4 Cardiac Rehabilitation? The 4 Phases of Cardiac Rehabilitation Explained
Richie Santiford
  • Phase 4 Cardiac Rehabilitation

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If you or someone you love has recently experienced a heart attack, cardiac surgery, or been diagnosed with heart failure, you may have heard the term “cardiac rehabilitation” mentioned by a cardiologist, GP, or nurse. But what does it actually mean? And where does Phase 4 fit into the picture?

My name is Richard Stantiford. I am a Clinical Exercise Specialist and the founder of The Lifestyle Physiologist, based in Brighton. With over 30 years of experience working with cardiac patients, I have guided hundreds of people through every stage of cardiac rehabilitation, from their first cautious steps after a hospital stay, right through to thriving, confident long-term exercise habits.

In this guide, I want to explain the four phases of cardiac rehabilitation clearly and in plain English, so that patients, carers, and anyone who has been referred for rehab can understand exactly what to expect, and why Phase 4 matters so much.

What Is Cardiac Rehabilitation?

Cardiac rehabilitation is a structured programme of exercise, education, and psychological support designed to help people recover from heart conditions and significantly reduce their risk of future cardiac events. In the UK, it is endorsed by the NHS, the British Heart Foundation (BHF), and the British Association for Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation (BACPR), the professional body of which I am a qualified member.

The programme is divided into four distinct phases, each matching a different stage of a patient’s recovery journey, from the acute hospital admission right through to lifelong heart health maintenance.

The 4 Phases of Cardiac Rehabilitation

Phase 1 — In-Hospital (Acute Stage)

Phase 1 begins while the patient is still in the hospital following a cardiac event or procedure. A cardiac rehab nurse or physiotherapist will visit the ward to:

  • Provide reassurance and early education about the diagnosis
  • Introduce gentle supervised mobilisation, sitting up, standing, and short walks
  • Assess the patient’s individual risk factors and readiness for activity
  • Begin preparing the patient psychologically for life after discharge

Physical activity at this stage is minimal and closely monitored. The primary goals are psychological: reducing anxiety, building confidence, and laying the foundations for recovery.

Phase 2 — Early Recovery at Home

Phase 2 covers the weeks immediately after hospital discharge. During this period:

  • Patients gradually increase daily activity levels at home
  • The cardiac rehab team maintains contact by phone or home visit
  • Symptoms, heart rate, and any complications are monitored
  • Education continues, covering medications, diet, activity guidance, and warning signs

This phase is often unsupervised in terms of formal exercise sessions, but patients are given clear, personalised guidance on what they can and cannot do. It is a critical transition period that is often underestimated.

Phase 3 — Supervised Outpatient Rehabilitation

Phase 3 is the supervised, structured programme that most people picture when they think of cardiac rehab. It is typically delivered through NHS hospitals or community health centres and runs for six to twelve weeks.

A standard Phase 3 programme will include:

  • Group or individual supervised exercise sessions, usually twice weekly
  • Aerobic and resistance training tailored to each patient’s capacity and medical history
  • Ongoing risk factor assessment, blood pressure monitoring, and symptom screening
  • Education sessions covering stress management, nutrition, medications, and returning to work
  • Psychological support for anxiety, depression, or difficulties adjusting to a new diagnosis

Phase 3 is delivered by a multidisciplinary team, often including specialist nurses, physiotherapists, dietitians, and psychologists. Waiting times for NHS Phase 3 programmes vary considerably across the UK, and not all patients are referred promptly or at all.

Phase 4 — Long-Term Community Maintenance

Phase 4 is what comes after the supervised NHS programme ends, and in my professional opinion, it is the most important phase of all.

It is the stage at which patients transition from clinical supervision to community-based, independently managed exercise. Without Phase 4 support, research consistently shows that the physical and psychological gains made during Phase 3 erode within months. The evidence is unambiguous on this: the benefits of exercise are not permanent unless exercise continues.

A well-structured Phase 4 programme, like the one I run at The Lifestyle Physiologist, provides:

  • Regular supervised exercise sessions led by a BACPR-qualified instructor
  • Ongoing monitoring of exercise intensity, symptoms, and progress
  • A safe, encouraging group environment with peers who genuinely understand the experience
  • Continued access to education and professional guidance
  • A sustainable bridge between clinical treatment and fully independent healthy living

Phase 4 is not routinely funded by the NHS, though provision varies by region. In Brighton and the wider Sussex area, my cardiac rehabilitation programme fills this gap with a clinically appropriate, evidence-based approach.

Why Phase 4 Is the Phase That Protects Long-Term Health

It might seem counterintuitive that the phase furthest from the acute event is the one with the greatest impact on long-term outcomes. But the physiology is clear: cardiovascular fitness, blood pressure regulation, lipid profiles, and heart muscle function all deteriorate when structured exercise stops. Phase 4 exists to prevent that deterioration.

People who maintain regular structured exercise after Phase 3 have significantly better survival rates, lower rates of hospital readmission, and better quality of life than those who stop exercising after their formal programme ends. This is not an opinion; it is what the research shows, consistently, across decades of evidence.

If you have completed Phase 3 cardiac rehabilitation and are looking for ongoing support in Brighton or the surrounding area, I would love to hear from you. You can book a free consultation or contact me directly to discuss whether my Phase 4 programme is the right fit for your needs.

Summary: The 4 Phases at a Glance

  • Phase 1 — In-hospital: early mobilisation, education, and psychological support
  • Phase 2 — At home: gradual return to activity with remote monitoring and guidance
  • Phase 3 — Supervised outpatient rehab: structured exercise and education (typically NHS)
  • Phase 4 — Long-term community maintenance: ongoing supervised exercise and lifestyle support

Cardiac rehabilitation is not a one-time intervention. It is a lifelong commitment to heart health, and Phase 4 is where that commitment becomes a sustainable, enjoyable part of everyday life.

About the Author: Richard Stantiford MSc, ACSM C-EP, BACPR is a Clinical Exercise Specialist and Specialist Personal Trainer based in Brighton. He is the founder of The Lifestyle Physiologist and has over 30 years of experience working with cardiac patients, stroke survivors, and people with chronic conditions. To learn more or book a free consultation, visit thelifestylephysiologist.com.

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