1.Mediating effect of coping style between family function and psychological resilience in patients with diabetes retinopathy
Guili XIE ; Jiajia ZHANG ; Nannan BA ; Guangming WAN
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2023;29(30):4170-4174
Objective:To explore the mediating effect of coping style between family function and psychological resilience in patients with diabetes retinopathy (DR) .Methods:From September 2021 to August 2022, 310 DR patients who visited the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University were selected as the study subject by convenience sampling. Patients were surveyed using the General Information Questionnaire, Simplified Coping Style Questionnaire (SCSQ) , Family Assessment Device (FAD) , and Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) . Pearson correlation was used to analyze the correlation between coping style, family function, and psychological resilience in DR patients. AMOS 21.0 software was used to establish structural equation models and verify mediating effects. A total of 310 questionnaires were distributed, and 297 valid questionnaires were collected, and the effective response rate of the questionnaire was 95.81% (297/310) .Results:Among 297 DR patients, the positive coping dimension score in SCSQ was (14.79±3.58) , while the negative coping dimension score was (16.37±4.02) . the FAD score was (169.28±23.34) . The total score of CD-RISC was (65.62±11.52) . The score of the positive coping dimension was negatively correlated with the FAD score ( P<0.05) , and positively correlated with the total score and each dimension score of CD-RISC ( P<0.05) . The score of negative coping dimension was positively correlated with the score of FAD ( P<0.05) , and negatively correlated with the total score and each dimension score of CD-RISC ( P<0.05) . The FAD score was negatively correlated with the total score and each dimension score of CD-RISC ( P<0.05) . Coping styles played a partial mediating effect between family function and psychological resilience, with the mediating effect accounting for 53.65% of the total effect. Conclusions:DR patients have poor family functional and moderate psychological resilience, and their coping styles tend to be negative. Medical and nursing staff should pay attention to and improve the family function of patients, promote their positive response to diseases, and enhance their family function and psychological resilience.