1.Experience of Gastric Cancer Survivors and their Spouses in Korea: Secondary Analysis.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2004;34(4):625-635
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to explore the experiences of gastric cancer couples in Korea and to generate a substantive theory integrating the experiences of gastric cancer survivors and their spouses as a whole. The specific aims of this study were to explore major problems gastric cancer couples faced and how they resolved these problems, focusing on inter-relational dynamics within the couples and on similarities and differences between the couples. METHODS: This was a secondary analysis study using grounded theory techniques. The study used the data of 11 married couples which was collected from in-depth interviews from two primary studies. The unit of analysis was dyads of gastric cancer survivors and their spouses. RESULT: The basic social psychological process that emerged from the analysis was "taking charge of their health." Major categories involved in this process were identified as 1) adjusting to new diets, 2) reinforcing physical strength, 3) seeking information, 4) strengthening Ki, 5) lowering life-expectations, and 6) going their separate ways. These six categories represent major strategies in overcoming critical problems that occurred in day-to-day experiences. In terms of the process, the first five categories characterize the earlier stage of the process of "taking charge of their health," while "going their separate ways" indicates the later stage and also the beginning of their separate ways: "pursuing spiritual life" for the survivors, and "preparing for the future" for the spouses. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study will help design family care for the people with gastric cancer by providing in-depth understanding and insight on the lives of gastric cancer couples.
*Adaptation, Psychological
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Adult
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Attitude to Death/ethnology
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Attitude to Health/*ethnology
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Female
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Grief
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Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
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Humans
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Internal-External Control
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Interpersonal Relations
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Korea
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Male
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Marriage/psychology
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Middle Aged
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Models, Psychological
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Nursing Methodology Research
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Qualitative Research
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Questionnaires
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Self Care/psychology
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Social Support
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Spirituality
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Spouses/education/*ethnology
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Stomach Neoplasms/*ethnology
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Survivors/*psychology
2.Development and Evaluation of a Dignified Dying Scale for Korean Adults.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2011;41(3):313-324
PURPOSE: The study was done to develop a dignified dying scale for Korean adults. METHODS: The process included construction of a conceptual framework, generation of initial items, verification of content validity, selection of secondary items, preliminary study, and extraction of final items. The participants were 428 adults who lived in one of 3 Korean metropolitan cities: Seoul, Daegu, and Busan. Item analysis, factor analysis, criterion related validity, and internal consistency were used to analyze the data. Data collection was done from March to June 2010. RESULTS: Thirty items were selected for the final scale, and categorized into 5 factors explaining 54.5% of the total variance. The factors were labeled as maintaining emotional comfort (10 items), arranging social relationship (9 items), avoiding suffering (3 items), maintaining autonomous decision making (4 items), and role preservation (4 items). The scores for the scale were significantly correlated with personal meanings of death scale. Cronbach's alpha coefficient for the 30 items was .92. CONCLUSION: The above findings indicate that the dignified dying scale has a good validity and reliability when used with Korean adults.
Adaptation, Psychological
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Adult
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Aged
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Analysis of Variance
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Attitude to Death/*ethnology
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Decision Making
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Demography
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Factor Analysis, Statistical
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Program Development
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Questionnaires
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Republic of Korea