1.Impact of Education on School Nurses' Knowledge of Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Eun Soo KIM ; Ki Tae KWON ; Sung Kook KIM ; Miyoung KIM ; Hyun Seok LEE ; Byung Ik JANG ; Kyeong Ok KIM ; Eun Young KIM ; Yoo Jin LEE ; Suk Jin HONG ; Chang Heon YANG ; Ben KANG ; Byung Ho CHOE
Gut and Liver 2019;13(1):48-53
BACKGROUND/AIMS: School nurses’ knowledge of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) has not been evaluated. We aimed to investigate school nurses’ knowledge of IBD and determine whether education could improve this knowledge. METHODS: School nurses were invited to complete self-reported questionnaires on IBD. Then, IBD specialists from tertiary referral hospitals provided a 60-minute lecture with educational brochures on two occasions, with a 3-month interval. Within 6 months after the educational interventions, school nurses were asked to complete the same IBD questionnaire via e-mail. RESULTS: Among 101 school nurses who were invited to participate, 54 nurses (53.5%) who completed two consecutive questionnaires were included in this study (median age, 45 years; range, 25 to 59 years; 100% female); 11.1% and 7.4% of the study participants had no knowledge regarding ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease, respectively. They had heard of IBD most frequently from doctors (33.3%), followed by internet sources (25.9%). After 6 months, the number of nurses who could explain IBD to students with over 30% confidence increased from 24 (44.5%) to 42 (77.8%) (p < 0.001). Most nurses (81.5%) reported that the educational intervention was helpful for managing students with abdominal pain or diarrhea. The number of students who received IBD-related welfare services from the Daegu Metropolitan Office of Education doubled when compared with the corresponding number during the prior educational year. CONCLUSIONS: There is room for improvement in school nurses’ knowledge of IBD. A systematic educational program on IBD should be implemented for these nurses.
Abdominal Pain
;
Colitis, Ulcerative
;
Crohn Disease
;
Daegu
;
Diarrhea
;
Education*
;
Electronic Mail
;
Humans
;
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases*
;
Internet
;
Pamphlets
;
Schools, Nursing
;
Specialization
;
Tertiary Care Centers
2.Impediment in Activity of Daily Living and Social Support for Rural Elderly Farmers Undergoing Nerve Block due to Low Back Pain
In Young CHOI ; Moon Sook HWANG
Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing 2019;30(2):206-216
PURPOSE: This study is to investigate the low back pain, social support, impediment in daily living activities and to identify factors affecting impediment in elderly farmer' daily living activities. METHODS: The participants were 128 elderly farmers who had received nerve block. Data were collected using a structured questionnaire from February to March, 2018. They were analyzed using t-test, ANOVA, pearson's correlation coefficient, and linear multiple regression. RESULTS: The score of low back pain was 6.27±1.69 (10 points), that of social support 2.92±0.76 (1~5 points), and that of impediment in activity of daily living 2.01±0.82 (0~5 points). Factors affecting impediment in activity of daily living were found to include age (p=.017), daily hours of farm work (p<.001), fear for the nerve block (p<.001), low back pain (p<.001), and social support (p<.001); the explanatory power of these variables was 58.8%. CONCLUSION: This study has found the controllable factors affecting impediment in activity of daily living among the rural elderly engaging in farm work include low back pain, social support, and daily farming hours. Therefore, to reduce impediment in activity of daily living among them, it is necessary to develop nursing interventions that can improve impediment in activity of daily living through reduction of daily farming hours using local resources. It is also desirable to improve their health status by reducing low back pain, and develop and apply social supports with health education programs that fit the local resources and the needs of the rural elderly.
Activities of Daily Living
;
Aged
;
Agriculture
;
Farmers
;
Health Education
;
Humans
;
Low Back Pain
;
Nerve Block
;
Nursing
3.Effects of Hand Moxibustion and Hand Press Pellet on Low Back Pain, Range of Joint Movement, and Depression
Yeoun Ok KIM ; Soon Ock CHOI ; Jee Won KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing 2019;30(3):336-344
PURPOSE: This study tries to examine the effects of hand moxibustion and press pellet by applying them to male manufacturing workers with low back pain, and use them to develop nursing interventions for workers. METHODS: The data were collected from August to October, 2018, and the subjects were 60 men, processed by using SPSS/WIN 21.0 to perform homogeneity test with χ²-, t-, and hypothesis tests with repeated measures, ANOVA and Scheffé test. RESULTS: Hypothesis 1 that “the experimental group provided with hand moxibustion and hand press pellet would give lower scores for low back pain than the control group” was supported (F=78.71, p<.001). Hypothesis 2 that “the experimental group provided with hand moxibustion and hand press pellet would have a wider range of motion than the control group” was also supported (F=17.44, p<.001). Hypothesis 3 that “the experimental group provided with hand moxibustion and hand press pellet would give lower scores for depression than the control group,” again, was supported (F=16.95, p<.001). CONCLUSION: Hand moxibustion and hand press pellet are effective in relieving low back pain for male workers, in increasing the range of motion, and in decreasing depression.
Depression
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Joints
;
Low Back Pain
;
Male
;
Moxibustion
;
Nursing
;
Range of Motion, Articular
4.Identification of Knowledge Structure of Pain Management Nursing Research Applying Text Network Analysis
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2019;49(5):538-549
PURPOSE: This study aimed to explore and compare the knowledge structure of pain management nursing research, between Korea and other countries, applying a text network analysis. METHODS: 321 Korean and 6,685 international study abstracts of pain management, published from 2004 to 2017, were collected. Keywords and meaningful morphemes from the abstracts were analyzed and refined, and their co-occurrence matrix was generated. Two networks of 140 and 424 keywords, respectively, of domestic and international studies were analyzed using NetMiner 4.3 software for degree centrality, closeness centrality, betweenness centrality, and eigenvector community analysis. RESULTS: In both Korean and international studies, the most important, core-keywords were “pain,” “patient,” “pain management,” “registered nurses,” “care,” “cancer,” “need,” “analgesia,” “assessment,” and “surgery.” While some keywords like “education,” “knowledge,” and “patient-controlled analgesia” found to be important in Korean studies; “treatment,” “hospice palliative care,” and “children” were critical keywords in international studies. Three common sub-topic groups found in Korean and international studies were “pain and accompanying symptoms,” “target groups of pain management,” and “RNs' performance of pain management.” It is only in recent years (2016~17), that keywords such as “performance,” “attitude,” “depression,” and “sleep” have become more important in Korean studies than, while keywords such as “assessment,” “intervention,” “analgesia,” and “chronic pain” have become important in international studies. CONCLUSION: It is suggested that Korean pain-management researchers should expand their concerns to children and adolescents, the elderly, patients with chronic pain, patients in diverse healthcare settings, and patients' use of opioid analgesia. Moreover, researchers need to approach pain-management with a quality of life perspective rather than a mere focus on individual symptoms.
Adolescent
;
Aged
;
Analgesia
;
Child
;
Chronic Pain
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Nursing Care
;
Nursing Research
;
Nursing
;
Pain Management
;
Pain Measurement
;
Quality of Life
;
Semantics
5.Development of the Nursing Practice Guideline for Pain Management according to the Guideline Adaptation Process
Young EUN ; Mi YU ; Mee Ok GU ; Yong Ae CHO ; Kyung Sook KIM ; Tae Hee KIM ; Hyun Hee LEE ; Mi Jin JEON
Journal of Korean Clinical Nursing Research 2019;25(1):1-14
PURPOSE: This study was done to develop a evidence-based guideline for pain assessment and management in Korea by adapting previously developed pain guidelines. METHODS: The guideline adaptation process was conducted using 24 steps according to the guideline adaptation manual developed by Hospital Nurses Association in 2012. RESULTS: The newly developed pain management guideline consisted of 9 domains and 234 recommendations. The number of recommendations in each domain was: 13 general instruction items, 51 pain assessments, 14 pain interventions, 66 pharmacological interventions for acute pain, 41 pharmacological interventions for chronic cancer pain, 35 pharmacological interventions for chronic noncancer pain, 21 non-pharmacological interventions, 2 documentations, 10 nursing education items, for pain. CONCLUSION: The findings suggest that the new pain management guideline can be used to address pain in hospital settings.
Acute Pain
;
Documentation
;
Education, Nursing
;
Evidence-Based Nursing
;
Korea
;
Nursing
;
Pain Management
;
Pain Measurement
6.Factors Affecting the Postoperative Pain and Length of Hospital Stay of Liver Transplantation Donors.
Je Hyun JUNG ; Kyung Sook BANG
Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education 2018;24(4):433-442
PURPOSE: This study was performed to investigate the factors affecting postoperative pain and length of hospital stay of liver transplantation donors. METHODS: This is a retrospective study using the Electronic Medical Records (EMR) of 91 patients operated on at a tertiary hospital in Seoul, Korea in 2016. The collected data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, t-test, Mann-Whitney U test and Kruskal-Wallis test, Spearman's rank correlation, and multiple regression analysis. RESULTS: The average age of the donors was 35.7±12.2 years, and all donors were family members. PCA was applied for control pain in all patients, and 40.7% of PCA-related side effects were observed. The average length of hospital stay was 9.24±2.52 days. The factors influencing the length of hospital stay were operative methods, pain control methods, and postoperative complications. The length of hospital stay was 1.29 days shorter if donors had no complication, 1.43 days shorter when only PCA was used, and 1.19 days shorter when laparoscopic resection was performed (Adjusted R2=0.17, F=4.67, p < .05). CONCLUSION: The results of this study can be used as basic data for practical and effective postoperative nursing education and intervention of living liver donors.
Education, Nursing
;
Electronic Health Records
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Length of Stay*
;
Liver Transplantation*
;
Liver*
;
Living Donors
;
Pain, Postoperative*
;
Passive Cutaneous Anaphylaxis
;
Postoperative Complications
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Seoul
;
Tertiary Care Centers
;
Tissue Donors*
7.Effects of aroma therapy and music intervention on pain and anxious for breast cancer patients in the perioperative period.
Yangfan XIAO ; Lezhi LI ; Yijia XIE ; Junmei XU ; Yan LIU
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2018;43(6):656-661
To investigate the effect of the aroma therapy and music intervention on anxious and pain for the breast cancer patients in the perioperative period and the potential mechanisms.
Methods: A total of 100 breast cancer patients who received surgical treatment in the comprehensive hospitals of Hunan province were recruited for this study. Patients were assigned randomly into a control group, an aroma therapy group, a music intervention group, and a joint-therapy group (n=25 per group). The patients in the control group received regular post-surgical nursery, while the patients from other groups received aroma therapy, music intervention, or both in addition to the regular nursery. The scale of anxiety and pain were measured. The measurements were carried at three time points, namely 30 min before the surgery (T1), 30 min after the recovery period of anesthesia (T2), and 4 hours after the removal of anesthesia tubing (T3). Repeated ANOVA was used to perform statistic analysis.
Results: The scale of pain was significantly increased at the post-operation (T2, T3) compared to pre-surgery (T1). The therapeutic group showed significant decrease in pain at post-operation (T3) comparing with the control group (P<0.05). The scale of anxiety was the highest at pre-surgery (T1). During anaesthesia recovery, the anxiety of patients at post-operation T2 and T3 in the therapeutic groups significantly decreased compared with the control group (P<0.05).
Conclusion: Both the aroma therapy and the music therapy can decrease the stress-responsive anxiety and pain for the breast cancer patients in the perioperative period.
Analysis of Variance
;
Anxiety
;
therapy
;
Aromatherapy
;
Breast Neoplasms
;
nursing
;
psychology
;
surgery
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Music Therapy
;
Pain, Postoperative
;
therapy
;
Perioperative Period
;
Preoperative Care
;
Time Factors
8.The Effects of Labor pain and Labour agentry on Perception of Delivery Experience in Puerperas Giving Birth in Midwifery Clinic
Journal of the Korean Society of Maternal and Child Health 2018;22(3):142-150
PURPOSE: This study intends to identify the relations among labor pain and labor agentry of puerperas giving birth in midwifery clinic and perception of delivery experience, and to establish factors influencing on their perception of delivery experience. METHODS: Descriptive survey research. Data were collected from puerperas giving birth through vaginal delivery in six midwifery clinics, and they were analyzed through t-test, ANOVA, pearson's correlation coefficients, and stepwise multiple regression. RESULTS: Figures of labor pain of puerperas giving birth in midwifery clinic by stage were 4.12, 6.80 and 8.11 in average in latent, active and transitional stage, respectively, while labor agentry and perception of delivery experience showed upper-middling figures, namely 3.70 and 3.94. It was revealed that labor agentry of puerperas giving birth in midwifery clinic had negative correlation with labor pain in latent stage (r=−0.176, p=0.021). Perception of delivery experience had the same with labor pain in latent stage (r=−0.177, p=0.020) and labor pain in active stage (r=−0.159, p=0.037), whereas perception of delivery experience had positive correlation with labor agentry (r=0.750, p < 0.001). In addition, factors influencing on perception of delivery experience of puerperas giving birth in midwifery clinic were labor agentry, educational background and marital satisfaction, accounting for 58.8%. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that developing and applying nursing intervention program that increases labor agentry so that puerperas giving birth in midwifery clinic may perceive childbirth experience positively.
Female
;
Labor Pain
;
Midwifery
;
Nursing
;
Parturition
;
Pregnancy
9.Effects of Auricular Acupressure Therapy on Musculoskeletal Pain, Depression and Sleep of the Elderly in Long-term Care Facilities
Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing 2018;29(2):133-142
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to examine and evaluate the effects of auricular acupressure on musculoskeletal pain, depression and sleep of the elderly who are institutionalized in long-term care facilities. METHODS: The research was conducted in a non-equivalent control group and non-synchronized design with data collected from October to December, 2016. The subjects were from long-term care facilities for the elderly in D city and divided into an experimental group (24 subjects) and a control group (25 subjects). RESULTS: After the intervention, the experimental group showed significant improvement in degree of musculoskeletal pain on time (χ2=23.89, p < .001) and degree of depression on time and group (χ2=37.42, p < .001, U=122.0, p < 001) and degree of sleep on time (χ2=33.62, p < .001). Thus, the suggested hypothesis is partially supported. CONCLUSION: Auricular acupressure therapy is expected to be a practical and efficient nursing intervention for the elderly institutionalized in long-term care facilities.
Acupressure
;
Aged
;
Depression
;
Humans
;
Long-Term Care
;
Musculoskeletal Pain
;
Nursing
10.Psychosocial Work Stressors, Work Fatigue, and Musculoskeletal Disorders: Comparison between Emergency and Critical Care Nurses in Brunei Public Hospitals.
Abdul Rahman HANIF ; Abdul Mumin KHADIZAH ; Naing LIN
Asian Nursing Research 2017;11(1):13-18
PURPOSE: Little evidence estimated the exposure of psychosocial work stressors, work-related fatigue, and musculoskeletal disorders for nurses working in South-East Asian region, and research on this subject is almost nonexistent in Brunei. The main aim of our study was to provide a comprehensive exploration and estimate exposure of the study variables amongst emergency (ER) and critical care (CC) nurses in Brunei. The study also aims to compare whether experiences of ER nurses differ from those of CC nurses. METHODS: This cross-sectional study was implemented in the ER and CC departments across Brunei public hospitals from February to April 2016 by using Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire II, Occupational Fatigue Exhaustion Recovery scale, and Cornell Musculoskeletal Discomfort Questionnaire. RESULTS: In total, 201 ER and CC nurses (82.0% response rate) participated in the study. Quantitative demands of CC nurses were significantly higher than ER nurses. Even so, ER nurses were 4.0 times more likely [95% confidence interval (2.21, 7.35)] to experience threats of violence, and 2.8 times more likely [95% confidence interval: (1.50, 5.29)] to experience chronic fatigue. The results revealed that nurses experienced high quantitative demands, work pace, stress, and burnout. High prevalence of chronic and persistent fatigue, threats of violence and bullying, and musculoskeletal pain at the neck, shoulder, upper and lower back, and foot region, was also reported. CONCLUSION: This study has provided good estimates for the exposure rate of psychosocial work stressors, work-related fatigue, and musculoskeletal disorders among nurses in Brunei. It provided important initial insight for nursing management and policymakers to make informed decisions on current and future planning to provide nurses with a conducive work environment.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Brunei*
;
Bullying
;
Critical Care Nursing
;
Critical Care*
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Emergencies*
;
Emergency Nursing
;
Fatigue*
;
Foot
;
Hospitals, Public*
;
Humans
;
Musculoskeletal Pain
;
Neck
;
Nursing
;
Occupational Health
;
Prevalence
;
Shoulder
;
Social Support
;
Violence

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