1.Psychometric Properties Of The Malay Version Of The Inventory Of Socially Supportive Behaviour (ISSB)
Nasir Yusoff ; Low Wah Yun ; Yip Cheng Har
ASEAN Journal of Psychiatry 2014;15(1):23-29
This study validates The Malay Version of The Inventory of Socially Supportive Behaviour. Methods: The psychometric properties of the ISSBMalay Version were examined on sixty-eight women who were Malay native speakers and diagnosed with breast cancer. Respondents answered the questionnaire at three weeks and ten weeks following surgery for breast cancer. Results: The Malay Version of ISSB showed excellent internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha=0.96). Test-retest Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC)
was 0.03. Small mean differences were observed at test-retest measurement with Effect Size Index 0.18. Conclusion: The Malay Version of the ISSB could be an
appropriate tool to measure the supportive behavior of the Malaysian population.
Social Support
;
Psychometrics
2.Perceived social support from family, friends and spiritual experiences as correlates of depression
Philippine Journal of Nursing 2021;91(2):14-21
Depression is the origin of ill health problems in college students. It advances as one of the leading causes of mental health issues. During their college life, freshmen encounter many firsts. These include a new environment, friends, exposure to social norms and culture. The students may struggle and experience difficulty if they cannot deal with these challenges. They can become a vulnerable population. Therefore, the overall purpose of this study is to conduct a baseline assessment of college students' experiences in the university. More so, this study 1) describes the characteristics of a sample of freshmen allied medical sciences students, 2) describes the levels of perceived social support from family and friends, spiritual experiences, and depressive symptomatology among allied medical sciences freshmen; and 3) to assesses the possible association among described positive influences (spirituality, family support, peer support) to depressive symptomatology. The study utilized a cross-sectional analytic quantitative design. In selecting respondents, a consecutive sampling technique was utilized. Respondents eligible to participate included first-year full-time students in the university taking up Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN), Bachelor of Medical Technologist (BSMT), and Bachelor of Science in Radiological Technologist (BSRT). A total of 110 undergraduate students participated in the study. Most of the students were females younger than 20 years old. The overall perceived social support from family and friends yielded average scores. The higher the scores, the greater the perception of social support from family and friends. For their spirituality, it showed that participants scored lower, indicating a high level of spiritual experiences. Lastly, the depression scale yielded high scores indicating that the participants had signs of severe/major depression, as based on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CES-D) scoring. The relationships between Depressive Symptoms and Perceived Social Support from Family (PSS-Family) and Friends (PSS-Friends), and Spirituality Experiences were also evaluated. It showed that Depression and PSS-Friends yielded a statistically significant relationship. However, there was no statistically significant relationship between Depression and PSS-Family. For the spirituality experiences, the test revealed that there is also a statistically significant relationship with depression. Overall, the study concludes that college life is a period of increased challenge for young allied medical health students. Their courses accompany complex and challenging responsibilities that increase tensions and anxiety. The results from these processes may cause or worsen stress when not given priority and could lead to depressive symptomatology. It was reflected that freshmen students' peer support and spiritual experiences appear to be closely associated with depressive symptomatology.
Social Support
;
Spirituality
;
Depression
3.Predictors of positive parenting among parents of adolescents in Northern Thailand
Suphaphan Chansiri ; Onnalin Singkhorn ; Suriyadeo Tripathi ; Chuntana Reangsing ; Umpai Charuwatcharapaniskul ; Dutchanee Limprasert ; Sineenat Waraphok ; Samuel F. Migallos
Philippine Journal of Nursing 2022;92(2):38-46
Background:
Positive parenting in families affects the development of adolescents, teaches the children to be complete physically,
mentally, emotionally, and socially, and is a preventative factor for risky behaviors such as unwanted pregnancies, sexually
transmitted diseases, violence, and drug addiction in adolescents.
Purpose:
This study aims to study positive parenting and factors predicting positive parenting among the parents of adolescents in
Northern Thailand.
Methods:
The design is a descriptive correlational predictive study. The sample consisted of 180 parents of adolescents in Chiang
Rai Province, Thailand. Convenient sampling was used from 180 parents of adolescents. Data were collected using questionnaires
including personal data, a life assets questionnaire, a social support questionnaire, a stress questionnaire, and a positive parenting
questionnaire. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Pearson's product-moment correlation coefficient, and multiple
linear regression analysis.
Results:
We found that stress, life assets, social support, age, education level, underlying disease, number of children, number of
members in the family, and living in a municipality together with income can influence positive parenting among the parents of
adolescents by 40.5 % (F = 11.52, p < .01). Age, life assets, and social support can affect positive parenting with a statistical
significance of p < .05.
Conclusions:
These results highlight the importance of age, life assets, and social support effects on positive parenting.
Implications and Contribution
These results could be used as a guideline for health care providers, particularly nurses, to
develop a positive parenting program for adolescents by enhancing life assets and social support to practice positive parenting
behaviours effectively.
Adolescent
;
Parents
;
Social Support
6.Meta-Analysis of the Research Findings Concerning Functional Relationships of Explanatory Variables to Hope.
Dal Sook KIM ; Weon Hee MOON ; Seong Yoon AHN ; Hyun Sook OH ; Kyung Hee KWON ; Moon Kyoung PARK ; Hyeon Sook CHOI ; Mee Ok LEE ; Young Ju KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2004;34(5):673-684
PURPOSE: The purpose of the study was to meta-analyze the relationships of major concepts, which were made by synthesizing similar explanatory variables into more comprehensive concepts, to hope. METHOD: The relevant researches from Jan 1980 to Dec 2003, performed in adults or adult patients, were collected. Using the SAS program, meta-analysis were done with the input data of the number of subjects, the correlation coefficients provided from most of the studies or a few transformed correlation coefficients from F value. In order to get the analysis to be done in homogeneous status of the data regarding each relationship of each major concept to hope(p>0.05), heterogeneous data were eliminated in repeating Q-test. RESULT: The major variable regarding relationship to self/transcendental being/life(spiritual wellbeing & self esteem) and social support(social support & family support) have very large positive effects on hope(D(_)=1.72, D(_)=1.27). The negative effect of the variable regarding captive state(uncertainty in illness, perceived unhealthiness status, & fatigue) and positive effect of coping(approach coping) on hope are in the level between moderate to large(D(_)=-0.61,D(_)=0.78). All the effects of the major concepts on hope were verified as significant statistically(p=.000). The Fail -Safe numbers showed the significant effects of the three major concepts except coping on hope were reliable. CONCLUSION: The results can be a guide to advance hope theory for nursing.
Attitude to Health
;
*Emotions
;
Humans
;
Self Concept
;
Social Support
;
Spirituality
8.Social network analysis of Iranian researchers in the field of violence.
Payman SALAMATI ; Faramarz SOHEILI
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2016;19(5):264-270
PURPOSEThe social network analysis (SNA) is a paradigm for analyzing structural patterns in social re- lations, testing knowledge sharing process and identifying bottlenecks of information flow. The purpose of this study was to determine the status of research in the fleld of violence in Iran using SNA.
METHODSResearch population included all the papers with at least one Iranian affiliation published in violence fleld indexed in SCIE, PubMed and Scopus databases. The co-word maps, co-authorship network and structural holes were drawn using related software. In the next step, the active authors and some measures of our network including degree centrality (DC), closeness, eigenvector, betweeness, density, diameter, compactness and size of the main component were assessed. Likewise, the trend of the published articles was evaluated based on the number of documents and their citations from 1972 to 2014.
RESULTSFive hundred and seventy one records were obtained. The five main clusters and hot spots were mental health, violence, war, psychiatric disorders and suicide. The co-authorship network was complex, tangled and scale free. The top nine authors with cut point role and top ten active authors were identified. The mean (standard deviation) of normalized DC, closeness, eigenvector and betweeness were 0.449 (0.805), 0.609 (0.214), 2.373 (7.353) and 0.338 (1.122), respectively. The density, diameter and mean compactness of our co-authorship network were 0.0494, 3.955 and 0.125, respectively. The main component consisted of 216 nodes that formed 17% of total size of the network. Both the number of the documents and their citations has increased in the field of violence in the recent years.
CONCLUSIONAlthough the number of the documents has recently increased in the field of violence, the information flow is slow and there are not many relations among the authors in the network. However, the active authors have ability to influence the flow of knowledge within the network.
Authorship ; Humans ; Iran ; Research Personnel ; Social Support ; Violence
9.Qualitative Study on Survival Stressors of 15 Community-dwelling People with Mental Illness.
Yu ZHAO ; Haiou ZOU ; Jianing GU ; Ying ZHOU ; Zheng LI
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2020;42(3):364-369
To understand the survival stress of community-dwelling people with mental disorder. Fifteen cases were selected by purposive sampling and received semi-structured individualized interviews.The data were analyzed by Colaizzi framework and themes were extracted. Four themes were extracted:physiological stress due to psychiatric symptoms and side effects of drugs;psychological stress due to the outcome of mental illness and to conflict of roles in daily life;social and environmental stress such as social discrimination,lack of job opportunities,and difficulty in obtaining social welfare resources;and interpersonal stress caused by discrimination and deteriorating family relations. Community-dwelling people with mental illness have a higher level survival stress after returning to their families and society,with the stressors including symptoms of illness,social discrimination,and interpersonal relationship.Eliminating self-discrimination of the patients,improving social support and social welfare system,and increasing individualized community mental rehabilitation activities may reduce the survival stress of these patients and promote their rehabilitation.
Humans
;
Independent Living
;
Mental Disorders
;
Qualitative Research
;
Social Support
10.Social psychological factors causes of acute exacerbation or re-decompensation of clinically significant chronic tinnitus.
Xiangli ZENG ; Zhicheng LI ; Peng LI ; Jintian CEN ; Yun ZHOU ; Yongqi LI
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2014;29(8):696-699
OBJECTIVE:
To analyze social-psychological causes of acute exacerbation or re-decompensation of chronic tinnitus and provide theoretical basis for controlling and preventing tinnitus exacerbation and re-decompensation.
METHOD:
Systemic audiological tests and tinnitus handicap inventory were performed on 136 chronic tinnitus patients with acuteexacerbation or re-decompensation. For the patients with new hearing loss, a further investigation of living conditions and assessment of social support rating scale were utilized. The patients with relatively definite causes were treated accordingly.
RESULT:
(1) There were 89 patients complained of new changes of hearing, all of whom could tell the definite time point of tinnitus exacerbation, and 5 of them felt the exacerbation of hearing loss meanwhile. (2) Forty-two patients encountered adverse events on life or working, and tinnitus exacerbation occurred within several weeks to 3 months afterwards. Most of these patients could not tell the definite time point of tinnitus exacerbation or re-decompensation. Five cases of tinnitus exacerbation didn't tell any adverse events on life or working, but showed mood disorders, and the anti-anxiety treatment was effective to them. (3) Forty-seven cases without new hearing loss scored significantly lower in SSRS than healthy adults.
CONCLUSION
Emerging hearing loss is the main cause of acute exacerbation of chronic tinnitus. To find it in time and give effective treatment can save newly presented hearing loss, cure or relieve tinnitus. Adverse events in life(or working) and short of social support is another important cause of acute exacerbation of chronic tinnitus or decompensation recurrence, which suggests that social-psychological factors besides of hearing loss should be concerned in diagnosis and treatment of tinnitus.
Adult
;
Disease Progression
;
Hearing Loss
;
Humans
;
Social Support
;
Tinnitus
;
psychology