1.A qualitative study on facilitators and barriers of home-based pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with pulmonary hypertension
Mengshuang SHEN ; Shuangyu WANG ; Xuejie ZHAO ; Xin DING ; Mei LIN
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(32):4348-4354
Objective:To explore the facilitators and barriers of home-based pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with pulmonary hypertension, in order to provide a basis for medical staff to formulate precise pulmonary rehabilitation interventions.Methods:The maximum variation purposive sampling method was used. From October to December 2023, a total of 12 patients with pulmonary hypertension attending the Department of Cardiology, Tianjin Medical University General Hospital, were selected as study participants and underwent semi-structured interviews. Colaizzi's phenomenological method was applied to analyze the data.Results:The facilitators of home-based pulmonary rehabilitation among patients with pulmonary hypertension included: capability factor (good exercise habits) ; opportunity factors (supervision and support from family members, professional guidance from medical staff) ; motivation factors (rehabilitation enthusiasm, perceived benefits of exercise). The barriers included: capability factors (obvious perception of physical symptoms, lack of knowledge about pulmonary rehabilitation, low level of e-health literacy) ; opportunity factors (unfavorable health environment, limited time) ; motivation factors (fear of exercise, lack of rehabilitation self-discipline) .Conclusions:Home-based pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with pulmonary hypertension is affected by multiple factors. Medical staff should adopt targeted interventions to promote patients' engagement in home-based pulmonary rehabilitation, with the aim of improving cardiopulmonary health, exercise endurance, and quality of life, thereby enhancing clinical prognosis.
2.Visual analysis of research hotspots and frontiers in cardiac telerehabilitation based on CiteSpace
Mengshuang SHEN ; Xuejie ZHAO ; Shuangyu WANG ; Mei LIN
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(4):519-526
Objective:To analyze the research status and emerging hotspots in the field of cardiac telerehabilitation (CTR) and provide references for the development of CTR in China.Methods:A systematic search was conducted for relevant literature on CTR in the databases of China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang, VIP, China Biology Medicine disc, Web of Science Core Collection, PubMed, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, and Embase, with a search timeframe from the establishment of the databases to February 28, 2024. EndNote and CiteSpace software were used for visual analysis of the search results.Results:A total of 889 papers were included, of which 269 were in Chinese and 620 were in English, showing an overall increasing trend in publication volume. The Chinese database revealed 12 clustering groups and 9 emerging keywords, while the English database identified 10 clustering groups and 16 emerging keywords.Conclusions:The publication volume of CTR is generally on the rise, but cooperation between countries and institutions still needs strengthening. Current research hotspots and frontiers include the demand for CTR, target populations, exercise program design, and the application of electronic information technology. Researchers in China should fully refer to these hotspots and frontiers and explore CTR models that are suitable for the Chinese patient population.
3.A qualitative study on facilitators and barriers of home-based pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with pulmonary hypertension
Mengshuang SHEN ; Shuangyu WANG ; Xuejie ZHAO ; Xin DING ; Mei LIN
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(32):4348-4354
Objective:To explore the facilitators and barriers of home-based pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with pulmonary hypertension, in order to provide a basis for medical staff to formulate precise pulmonary rehabilitation interventions.Methods:The maximum variation purposive sampling method was used. From October to December 2023, a total of 12 patients with pulmonary hypertension attending the Department of Cardiology, Tianjin Medical University General Hospital, were selected as study participants and underwent semi-structured interviews. Colaizzi's phenomenological method was applied to analyze the data.Results:The facilitators of home-based pulmonary rehabilitation among patients with pulmonary hypertension included: capability factor (good exercise habits) ; opportunity factors (supervision and support from family members, professional guidance from medical staff) ; motivation factors (rehabilitation enthusiasm, perceived benefits of exercise). The barriers included: capability factors (obvious perception of physical symptoms, lack of knowledge about pulmonary rehabilitation, low level of e-health literacy) ; opportunity factors (unfavorable health environment, limited time) ; motivation factors (fear of exercise, lack of rehabilitation self-discipline) .Conclusions:Home-based pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with pulmonary hypertension is affected by multiple factors. Medical staff should adopt targeted interventions to promote patients' engagement in home-based pulmonary rehabilitation, with the aim of improving cardiopulmonary health, exercise endurance, and quality of life, thereby enhancing clinical prognosis.
4.Visual analysis of research hotspots and frontiers in cardiac telerehabilitation based on CiteSpace
Mengshuang SHEN ; Xuejie ZHAO ; Shuangyu WANG ; Mei LIN
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(4):519-526
Objective:To analyze the research status and emerging hotspots in the field of cardiac telerehabilitation (CTR) and provide references for the development of CTR in China.Methods:A systematic search was conducted for relevant literature on CTR in the databases of China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang, VIP, China Biology Medicine disc, Web of Science Core Collection, PubMed, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, and Embase, with a search timeframe from the establishment of the databases to February 28, 2024. EndNote and CiteSpace software were used for visual analysis of the search results.Results:A total of 889 papers were included, of which 269 were in Chinese and 620 were in English, showing an overall increasing trend in publication volume. The Chinese database revealed 12 clustering groups and 9 emerging keywords, while the English database identified 10 clustering groups and 16 emerging keywords.Conclusions:The publication volume of CTR is generally on the rise, but cooperation between countries and institutions still needs strengthening. Current research hotspots and frontiers include the demand for CTR, target populations, exercise program design, and the application of electronic information technology. Researchers in China should fully refer to these hotspots and frontiers and explore CTR models that are suitable for the Chinese patient population.
5.Multilevel analysis of factors influencing mental health of nursing staff in four provinces in China
Mengshuang LIU ; Kezhi JIN ; Siyi WANG ; Ying SHEN
Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine 2022;39(6):639-644
Background Nursing staff are often exposed to a variety of occupational risk factors in the working environment, such as long working hours and heavy workload, which associated with adverse mental health outcomes. And these factors may not be randomly distributed across different levels. Objective To explore mental health risk factors of nursing staff by multilevel analysis. Methods A cross-sectional survey of nursing staff in Shanghai Municipality, Zhejiang Province, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region was conducted through convenience sampling from 2018 to 2021. Data were collected by self-report questionnaires. The mental component summaries of 12-Iitem Short Form Health Survey were used to evaluate the mental health status of nursing staff, and related factors were collected atindividual level, including gender, body mass index (BMI), smoking status, drinking status, working years, pain intensity of musculoskeletal disorders, and working hours per week, and at regional level, including gross domestic product (GDP) level of each province. A two-level model was established by incorporating both individual and regional factors, and deviance was used to test the goodness of fit of the model. A traditional generalized linear model was also established, and then compared with the multilevel model. Results A total of 567 nurses participated in this study, and the valid rate of questionnaire was 80.08%. The results of the multilevel model showed that the regional factor contributed 12.1% to the mental component summaries. As to the regional factor, GDP was negatively correlated with mental health of nursing staff, the adjusted OR (AOR) was −0.53 (95%CI: −0.66-−0.28). Among the factors at individual level, the mental component summaries of females were lower than those of males (AOR=−3.25, 95%CI: −4.73-−0.35); the longer the working years, the higher the mental health score (AOR=0.11, 95%CI: 0.06-0.20); working hours per week (AOR=−0.10, 95%CI: −0.14-−0.03) and pain intensity of musculoskeletal disorders (AOR=−0.05, 95%CI: −0.06-−0.03) were negatively correlated with mental component summaries. The results of the generalized linear model included the same factors as the multilevel model, but the 95%CIs of AOR of the factors in the multilevel model were narrower, and the deviation value of the multilevel model was the smallest, indicating that the goodness of fit of the multilevel model was better than that of the traditional linear model. Conclusion The mental health of nursing staff is not only affected by individual level factors, but also affected by regional level factors. It suggests that combining different levels of intervention measures can upscale the effect of improving mental health in nursing staff.

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