1.Benefits of Mindfulness Training on the Mental Health of Women During Pregnancy and Early Motherhood: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Shu Lei WANG ; Meng Yun SUN ; Xing HUANG ; Da Ming ZHANG ; Li YANG ; Tao XU ; Xiao Ping PAN ; Rui Min ZHENG
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2023;36(4):353-366
OBJECTIVE:
This study aimed to evaluate the effects of a mindfulness-based psychosomatic intervention on depression, anxiety, fear of childbirth (FOC), and life satisfaction of pregnant women in China.
METHODS:
Women experiencing first-time pregnancy ( n = 104) were randomly allocated to the intervention group or a parallel active control group. We collected data at baseline (T0), post-intervention (T1), 3 days after delivery (T2), and 42 days after delivery (T3). The participants completed questionnaires for the assessment of the levels of depression, anxiety, FOC, life satisfaction, and mindfulness. Differences between the two groups and changes within the same group were analyzed at four time points using repeated-measures analysis of variance.
RESULTS:
Compared with the active control group, the intervention group reported lower depression levels at T2 ( P = 0.038) and T3 ( P = 0.013); reduced anxiety at T1 ( P = 0.001) and T2 ( P = 0.003); reduced FOC at T1 ( P < 0.001) and T2 ( P = 0.04); increased life satisfaction at T1 ( P < 0.001) and T3 ( P = 0.015); and increased mindfulness at T1 ( P = 0.01) and T2 ( P = 0.006).
CONCLUSION
The mindfulness-based psychosomatic intervention effectively increased life satisfaction and reduced perinatal depression, anxiety, and FOC.
Humans
;
Pregnancy
;
Female
;
Mental Health
;
Mindfulness
;
Pregnant Women/psychology*
;
Anxiety/prevention & control*
;
China
;
Depression/prevention & control*
2.Type A Personality and Coronary Artery Disease.
Hanyang Medical Reviews 2014;34(2):72-76
Cardiovascular diseases are well known to be associated with several psychiatric illnesses. Most of the related psychological problems were type A personality, stress related problems, anxiety, and depressive illnesses. The dimensions of the associations are various from risk factor to triggering factor. With recent advances in the understanding of the mechanisms of heart attacks, the pathogenesis model by type A personality or depression might be associated with both longstanding atherogenic components or risk factors and decisive momentum to trigger the heart attack. Accordingly, in addition to the management of the unhealthy behavior related to the type A personality, intervention for the acute psychologic crisis might be equally important. Moreover, the association between the type A personality and cardiovascular diseases is observed in the primary prevention as well as secondary prevention studies. Due to the nature of the associated psychological problems, the background of the social environments seems to be deeply involved in the associations. The understanding of the complexity of the association is the key to further studies.
Anxiety
;
Cardiovascular Diseases
;
Coronary Artery Disease*
;
Depression
;
Heart
;
Primary Prevention
;
Risk Factors
;
Secondary Prevention
;
Social Environment
;
Type A Personality*
3.Use of Animated Cartoons with Children's Songs to Increase Compliance with Ultrasonography in Young Children.
Sok Hwan LIM ; Myung Joon KIM ; Mi Jung LEE
Yonsei Medical Journal 2013;54(6):1533-1537
PURPOSE: To evaluate the effect of animated cartoons with children's songs to increase compliance with ultrasonography (US) examination in young children. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Animated cartoons with children's songs viewed on a cell phone were played just before the start of US examination when pediatric patients were agitated or irritable. The effect of this method was evaluated for initial responses and sustained responses (grade 0, no response; 1, partial response; and 2, good response). Site of US examination, scan duration, and the helpfulness of this method (0, useless; 1, partially helpful; and 2, very helpful) were also recorded. RESULTS: Among 464 pediatric patients who underwent US during the study period, 88 children (19%) needed to be calmed (67 abdominal and 21 other parts of the body). All subjects were less than five years of age (mean 1.5 years), except for four patients with mental retardation. Scan duration was less than 5 minutes in almost all examinations. Five children refused to watch the cartoon. Initial responses were good in 75 and partial in eight children. Sustained responses were good in 70 and partial in 12 children. The cartoons were very helpful in 73 (83%) and partially helpful in nine (10%) children. The effect of watching the cartoon did not change with sex, age (less or more than one year), or site of examination. CONCLUSION: Animated cartoons with children's songs viewed on a cell phone were helpful (93%) in increasing compliance with US examination in young children of both the abdomen and other parts.
Adolescent
;
Anxiety/prevention & control
;
Child
;
Child, Preschool
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Infant
;
Male
;
Music
;
*Patient Compliance
;
Ultrasonography/*methods
4.Effects of the combination of mask preconditioning with midazolam pretreatment on anxiety and mask acceptance during pediatric inhalational induction and postoperative mask fear in children.
Yun-Ping LAN ; Zhen-Hua HUANG ; G Allen FINLEY ; Yun-Xia ZUO
Chinese Medical Journal 2012;125(11):1908-1914
BACKGROUNDAnxiety and fear frequently causes an aversion to applying a face mask and increases difficulty during pediatric induction. There is at present little study of this problem. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the effect of the combination of mask preconditioning and midazolam pretreatment on mask acceptance during pediatric induction and on postoperative mask fear.
METHODSOne hundred and sixty children were randomly assigned into four groups: the mask preconditioning group (MaG), the midazolam pretreatment group (MiG), the mask/midazolam combination group (Ma/MiG), and the saline group (SaG). The Modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale (m-YPAS) was employed to assess the anxiety in the operation room (OR). A Mask Acceptance Score (MAS) was measured during inhalational induction and the incidence of mask fear (MAS ≤ 2) was evaluated postoperatively.
RESULTSThe MaG and Ma/MiG groups had the highest mask acceptance scores but there were no differences between these two groups (P < 0.05). The average anxiety level of children entering the OR was much lower in the MaG and Ma/MiG groups than in the SaG group (P < 0.05). During induction, the anxiety level increased in the SaG and MaG groups but decreased in the MiG and Ma/MiG groups (P < 0.05). At the postoperative third day, the incidence of mask fears was as high as 23% in the SaG group, 15% in the MiG group, but only 2.5% in the MaG and Ma/MiG groups.
CONCLUSIONSThe single use of mask preconditioning has a better influence than midazolam for increasing mask acceptance during inhalational induction and reducing postoperative mask fear, reducing the anxiety level during induction, improving induction compliance and shortening the total mask time. A mask preconditioning and midazolam combination did not increase mask acceptance during inhalational induction, reduce mask fears postoperatively, improve induction compliance, nor shorten the total mask time. But it can better reduce the anxiety level during induction.
Anxiety ; prevention & control ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Fear ; drug effects ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Masks ; Midazolam ; therapeutic use
5.Advances in the research of effects of music therapy on pain and anxiety in burn patients.
Chinese Journal of Burns 2015;31(3):183-185
Pain and anxiety engender major psychic problems during all phases of treatment for burn patients. Analgesic alone does not allay these problems satisfactorily in these patients. Music therapy, as an important complementary and alternative therapy, has been widely used in multiple medical fields. However, its positive effect on alleviation of pain and anxiety in burn patients is undefined. The objective of this review is to summarize the feasibility, application fields, methods, and the effectiveness of music therapy in allaying pain and anxiety of burn patients during the whole course of treatment.
Anxiety
;
therapy
;
Burns
;
Humans
;
Music
;
psychology
;
Music Therapy
;
methods
;
Pain
;
prevention & control
;
Pain Measurement
6.Mental health of front-line staff in prevention of coronavirus disease 2019.
Ziwei TENG ; Jing HUANG ; Yan QIU ; Yuxi TAN ; Qiuping ZHONG ; Hui TANG ; Haishan WU ; Ying WU ; Jindong CHEN
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2020;45(6):613-619
OBJECTIVES:
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is a global public health crisis, which elicits psychological problems in different population This study is to investigate the impact of COVID-19 on mental health in the front-line staff.
METHODS:
Patient Health Questionnare-9 (PHQ-9), Self-Rating Anxiety Scale (SAS), and Fatigue Self-assessment Scale (FSAS) were used to assess the depression, anxiety, and fatigue in front-line staff.
RESULTS:
The detection rates of depression, anxiety, and fatigue were 49.1%, 21.8%, and 76.0% among the front-line staff. The rates of depression, anxiety, and fatigue in community workers were higher than those in medical workers and other occupational staff (<0.01). The PHQ-9 of front-line staffs was negatively correlated with age, family income, family members' support, satisfaction of service objects, and sleep quality (all <0.01), while positively correlated with education level, fatigue, fear of pneumonia, and the duration of daily attention to the COVID-19 (all <0.01). SAS was negatively correlated with age, family income, family support, satisfaction of objects service, and sleep quality (all <0.01), while positively correlated with gender, fatigue, fear of pneumonia, and duration of daily attention to the COVID-19 (all <0.01).
CONCLUSIONS
The front-line workers should manage work and rest time reasonably to adjust their negative mood and fatigue. The government and the society should pay more attention to the psychological state of the front-line staff, particularly for the staff working in the community or villages and towns in preventing the COVID-19 pandemic. Thus, front-line staff can be obtained mental intervention or be taken a rest from the high-intensive work.
Anxiety
;
diagnosis
;
Betacoronavirus
;
Coronavirus Infections
;
prevention & control
;
psychology
;
Depression
;
diagnosis
;
Fatigue
;
diagnosis
;
Health Personnel
;
psychology
;
Humans
;
Mental Health
;
Pandemics
;
prevention & control
;
Pneumonia, Viral
;
prevention & control
;
psychology
7.Exercise and Physical Activity in Mental Disorders: Clinical and Experimental Evidence.
Elisabeth ZSCHUCKE ; Katharina GAUDLITZ ; Andreas STROHLE
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2013;46(Suppl 1):S12-S21
Several epidemiological studies have shown that exercise (EX) and physical activity (PA) can prevent or delay the onset of different mental disorders, and have therapeutic benefits when used as sole or adjunct treatment in mental disorders. This review summarizes studies that used EX interventions in patients with anxiety, affective, eating, and substance use disorders, as well as schizophrenia and dementia/mild cognitive impairment. Despite several decades of clinical evidence with EX interventions, controlled studies are sparse in most disorder groups. Preliminary evidence suggests that PA/EX can induce improvements in physical, subjective and disorder-specific clinical outcomes. Potential mechanisms of action are discussed, as well as implications for psychiatric research and practice.
Anxiety Disorders/prevention & control/therapy
;
Databases, Factual
;
Dementia/prevention & control/therapy
;
Eating Disorders/prevention & control/therapy
;
*Exercise
;
Humans
;
Mental Disorders/prevention & control/*therapy
;
Mood Disorders/prevention & control/therapy
;
Motor Activity
;
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder/prevention & control/therapy
;
Schizophrenia/prevention & control/therapy
;
Substance-Related Disorders/prevention & control/therapy
8.The Effects of Self-Selected Music on Anxiety and Pain during Burn Dressing Changes.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(1):159-168
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of music therapy on state anxiety and pain among patients undergoing burn dressing changes. METHOD: A convenience sample of 32 adult burn patients who were eligible and provided consent were included in the study which was a quasi-experimental study of a nonequivalent control group pretest-posttest design. Fifteen patients in the control group received the routine burn dressing changes but 17 patients in the experimental group listened to self-selected music through headphones connected to a CD player during burn dressing changes for three days. All subjects of the music group chose the type of music that would relax them. Before and after burn dressing changes, subjects completed the State Anxiety Inventory and self-report of pain scores. RESULT: There was a significant reduction in state anxiety before and after burn dressing changes in those who received music therapy in contrast to those who did not receive music therapy. The music group reported lower pain scores before and after burn dressing changes than did the non-music group. CONCLUSION: These findings indicate that music therapy composed of self-selected music is a valuable intervention for the treatment of pain and anxiety in patients undergoing burn dressing changes.
Pain Measurement
;
Pain/etiology/*prevention & control
;
*Music Therapy
;
Middle Aged
;
Male
;
Humans
;
Female
;
Burns/*nursing
;
*Bandages
;
Anxiety/*etiology/prevention & control
;
Adult
9.Effects of Delivery Nursing Care using Essential Oils on Delivery Stress Response, Anxiety during Labor, and Postpartum Status Anxiety.
Myung Haeng HUR ; Nam Youn CHEONG ; Hye Sung YUN ; Mi Kyoung LEE ; Youngshin SONG
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2005;35(7):1277-1284
OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to investigate the effect of delivery nursing care using essential oils on labor stress response, labor anxiety and postpartum status anxiety for primipara. METHODS: This study used nonequivalent control group pretest-posttest design. The subjects of this experiment consisted of forty eight primipara with single gestation, full term, & uncomplicated pregnancies. Twenty four primipra were in the experimental and control group each. Their mean age was 27.9 years old, their mean gestation period 279.9 days. As a treatment, delivery nursing care using essential oils was applied by nurses. Data collected epinephrine, norepinephrine, anxiety during labor. In the 24 hours after birth, the data for the postpartum mother's status anxiety was collected. Data was analyzed by t-test, repeated measures ANOVA, Mann-Whitney U test, & Wilcoxon signed ranks test with SPSS Program. RESULTS: Plasma epinephrine, norepinephrine were significantly low in the experimental group (P=0.001, P=0.033, respectively). There was no significant difference between the two groups in anxiety during labor and postpartum mother's status anxiety. CONCLUSION: These findings indicate that delivery nursing care using essential oils could be effective in decreasing plasma epinephrine, norepinephrine. But, that could not be verified in decreasing mother's anxiety.
Stress/*prevention & control
;
Pregnancy
;
Postpartum Period/*psychology
;
Oils, Volatile/*therapeutic use
;
Norepinephrine/blood
;
Labor, Obstetric/*psychology
;
Humans
;
Female
;
Epinephrine/blood
;
Delivery, Obstetric/*nursing
;
*Aromatherapy
;
Anxiety/*prevention & control
;
Adult
10.The Effect of Music Therapy on Anxiety and Depression in Patients Undergoing Hemodialysis.
Kwuy Bun KIM ; Mi Hunn LEE ; Sohyune R SOK
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(2):321-329
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of music therpy on anxiety and depression in patients undergoing hemodialysis. METHOD: The study was designed using a nonequivalent control group pretest-posttest design. The subjects consisted of 36 patients (Experimental group: 18, Control group: 18) who received hemodialysis in three hospitals located in Seoul. The measures were a Music Preference Questionnaire (MPQ), anxiety measurement, and depression measurement. Data was collected from December 26, 2004 to April 2, 2005 through questionnaires. The collected data was analyzed by the SPSS 10.0 program. RESULT: The first hypothesis that patients undergoing hemodialysis who received music therapy would have less anxiety than patients undergoing hemodialysis who did not receive music therapy was supported (F=8.05, p=.008). The second hypothesis that patient undergoing hemodialysis who received music therapy would have less depression than patients undergoing hemodialysis who did not receive music therapy was supported(F=11.86, p=.002). CONCLUSION: The results of this study suggest that music therapy may be applied as a method of nursing intervention contributing to the improvement of quality life by reducing their anxiety and depression of patients undergoing hemodialysis.
Adult
;
Anxiety/etiology/*prevention & control
;
Depression/etiology/*prevention & control
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Music Therapy/*methods
;
Quality of Life
;
Questionnaires
;
Relaxation Therapy
;
Renal Dialysis/*psychology