Effects of Pender health promotion theory in patients with acute cerebral infarction during recovery period
10.3760/cma.j.cn115682-20220307-01031
- VernacularTitle:Pender健康促进理论在急性脑梗死恢复期患者中的应用
- Author:
Jing DIAO
1
;
Lin XIANG
Author Information
1. 江汉大学附属湖北省第三人民医院神经内科一病区,武汉 430030
- Keywords:
Acute cerebral infarction;
Pender health promotion theory;
Recovery period;
Neural function;
Motor function
- From:
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing
2022;28(29):4088-4093
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To explore the effect of Pender health promotion theory in the clinical nursing of patients with acute cerebral infarction (ACI) in the recovery period.Methods:From January to December 2021, convenience sampling was used to select 200 ACI patients in the recovery period admitted to the Third People's Hospital of Hubei Province affiliated to Jianghan University as the research subject. According to the order of admission, the patients were divided into the control group and the observation group, with 100 cases in each. The control group was given routine nursing, and the observation group was given nursing under the guidance of Pender health promotion theory on the basis of the control group. We compared the scores of Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) , Simplified Coping Style Questionnaire (SCSQ) , Self-care Ability Scale (ESCA) , NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS) , Fugl-Meyer Assessment Scale (FMA) , Short Form-36 Questionnaire (SF-36) and nursing satisfaction between the two groups.Results:After intervention, the scores of CD-RISC and SCSQ positive coping, ESCA, FMA, SF-36 scores and nursing satisfaction of the observation group were higher than those of the control group, while the NIHSS and SCSQ negative coping scores were lower than those of the control group, and the above differences were statistically significant ( P<0.05) . Conclusions:Pender health promotion theory can reduce the neurological deficits in patients with ACI in the recovery period, improve coping styles, patients' resilience, self-care ability, motor function, quality of life, and patient satisfaction, which is worthy of clinical application.