1.The Illness Experiences of Adolescents with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus:A Qualitative Meta-synthesis
Ziyu SUN ; Wenjuan ZHANG ; Jiaqi WANG ; Yibao ZHANG ; Yuhong WU
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):313-321
This study aims to systematically review the illness experience of adolescent patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). The JBI qualitative systematic review method was used and meta-aggregate analysis of 14 qualitative studies was performed. Qualitative studies on the disease experience of adolescent patients with T1DM were obtained from Cochrane, PubMed, Web of Science, CINAHL, Embase, Wanfang, CNKI, and VIP, and the search period was from 1995 to 2024. The qualitative research quality evaluation tool of JBI the Evidence-based Health Care Center in Australia was used to evaluate the analysis results. Thirty-one results were distilled and categorized into 7 themes and then synthesized into 3 overarching findings: (1) experiencing psychological distress and developing coping mechanisms following adjustment; (2) acknowledging self-management shortcomings and actively seeking support;and (3) overcoming challenges and growing through experiences. The findings illuminate that adolescents with T1DM often experience negative physical and emotional challenges during their illness.Transitioning from dependency to independence poses numerous obstacles that can be overcome by improving both internal and external support, cultivating self-management skills, strengthening coping mechanisms, and achieving control over the disease while fostering personal growth.
2.Exploring the Care Experiences Among Clinical Staffing During Emerging Infectious Disease: From the COVID-19 Pandemic Approach
Yuhsia LEE ; Fenfang CHUNG ; Peihung LIAO ; Paoyu WANG ; Meihsiang LIN
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):222-230
Purpose:
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), one of the most significant recent emerging infectious diseases, has evolved into a global pandemic, resulting in an unprecedented public health crisis with substantial morbidity. The aim of this study was to investigate the care experiences of nursing staff during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods:
A qualitative, exploratory interview study. This study was conducted from August 2022 to January 2023. Participants were recruited from a medical center in northern Taiwan. A purposive sampling approach was employed to select the participants, and in-depth interviews were conducted with a total of 30 individuals. The collected data were analyzed using content analysis.
Results:
The findings of this study revealed five themes that summarized the care experiences of participants during the COVID-19 pandemic, enhanced nursing competence in pandemic mitigation, adherence to clear safety measures, effective adaptation to the stress of the “unknown,” and recognition of the meaning of the pandemic mitigation experience.
Conclusion
This study informs pandemic readiness for nurses and policy enhancement. Medical institutions and governments must prioritize policies ensuring staffing, PPE access, and mental health support. Educators and administrators should elevate on-the-job crisis management training. Future planning should cater to Taiwanese nurses' needs during unforeseen crises such as COVID-19.
3.Latent Class Analysis on Suicide-related Behavior and Associated Factors in Korean Adolescents
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):260-267
Purpose:
This study aimed to analyze the latent class of suicide-related behaviors among Korean adolescents and identify related factors.
Methods:
This study used 2021 Korean Youth Risk Behavior Web-Based Survey data and analyzed 7300 participants using latent class analysis.
Results:
Suicide-related behaviors were categorized into four classes: suicide ideation only (Class 1), suicide plan without ideation or attempt (Class 2), suicide attempt with ideation and plan (Class 3), and suicide attempt without ideation or plan (Class 4). Sexual intercourse experience, habitual drug use experience, and hospital treatment experience due to violence, which were set as risky behavior-related variables, were found to be factors influencing Class 3. However, these variables were not statistically significant factors affecting those belonging to Class 2 and Class 4.
Conclusion
The findings emphasize the necessity of understanding the variances in suicide-related behaviors among adolescents to tailor interventions effectively. Adolescents who plan and attempt suicide despite having low levels of suicidal ideation exhibited high levels of stress and a tendency for sadness and despair compared to the suicide attempt with the ideation and plan group. These insights underscore the importance of addressing psycho-emotional factors and developing intervention strategies that cater specifically to the nuanced needs of each group to prevent potential suicide attempts.
4.Lived Experiences of Pregnant Women With Cancer in South Korea: A Qualitative Study
Da Bit LEE ; Hae Won KIM ; Young Jin LEE ; Jieun KIM
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):296-304
Purpose:
The incidence of cancer during pregnancy is increasing, presenting several challenges to the treatment of cancer in pregnant women. However, research focusing on the lived experiences of pregnant women with cancer in South Korea is limited. This study aimed to explore and describe the day-today lived experiences of women diagnosed with or treated for cancer during pregnancy and their husbands.
Methods:
The study employed a qualitative descriptive design and utilized purposive sampling to recruit participants. The participants comprised six women living in Korea diagnosed with cancer during pregnancy and one husband of a female participant. In-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted, audiotaped, and transcribed. Five of the participants agreed to a second interview, resulting in a total of 12 individual interviews. A thematic analysis was then performed. The participants' ages ranged from 31 to 40 years, and their diagnoses during pregnancy were either breast or thyroid cancer.
Results:
Four main themes were identified: (1) Participants faced various heart-breaking difficulties maintaining their pregnancies throughout cancer treatment; (2) Pregnant women with cancer experienced complex but responsible feelings toward their children; (3) Patients with cancer also fulfilled their roles as parents even with their own diseases; and (4) Family support had a significant impact on the pregnant women to overcome the path.
Conclusions
These findings provide a comprehensive understanding of the lived experiences of being diagnosed with cancer during pregnancy. A recommended strategy is to develop a nursing education program for pregnant women with cancer to provide necessary information and support, and to help them cope positively with their situation.
5.Relationship Between Emotional Intelligence, Occupational WellBeing, and Work Engagement Among Chinese Clinical Nurses
XiaoLei GAO ; Tong ZHAO ; MinXia DU ; Ran HAO ; LiNa WANG
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):253-259
Purpose:
To identify the relationship between emotional intelligence, occupational well-being, and work engagement among Chinese clinical nurses.
Methods:
This cross-sectional study is based on survey responses provided by 1744 registered nurses from a Chinese hospital. The survey utilized emotional intelligence, occupational well-being, and work engagement scales.
Results:
A questionnaire was distributed to nurses, and among them, 1744 filled it in. Work engagement was related to demographic characteristics. The nurses' work engagement score was 28.99±5.46. Work engagement was positively correlated with emotional intelligence (r=.94, p < .01) and occupational well-being (r=.96, p < .01).
Conclusions
The current work engagement of nurses in China is at a medium level. It is influenced by emotional intelligence and occupational well-being.
6.Investigating the Possibility of Nurse Prescribing Training Development in Nursing Education System in Iran
Aazam SOLTANINEJAD ; Fatemeh ALHANI ; Maryam RASSOULI
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):268-280
Purpose:
Adequate medical knowledge and skills are fundamentals for nurse prescribing authority development. This study will explore the potential for developing nurse prescribing training in Iran, where nurses currently lack prescribing authority despite their strong academic nursing education.
Methods:
This is a study with two phases. At first, in a conventional qualitative content analysis method, with purposive and snowball sampling, from June 2021 to March 2023, 20 participants, including 16nurses in different clinical, managerial, educational, and policy-making settings, three physicians, and one clinical pharmacist were interviewed. Unstructured interviews were conducted face-to-face or virtually as the situation required during the pandemic period due to Coronavirus disease, 2019 (COVID-19). Qualitative content analysis as developed by Elo and Kynga€ s in 2008 was used for data analysis. In the second comparative analysis phase, four masters of science and one doctor of nursing curricula analyzed in the existence of the nurse prescribing prerequisite courses and these five curricula and two potential masters of science in community health and critical care nursing curricula were compared with John Hopkins University curricula.
Results:
In the qualitative phase, two themes emerged: nursing education challenges and the potential for nurse prescribing training development. These were further broken down into four subthemes:inadequate nurses' knowledge in prerequisite nurse prescribing courses, unprepared educational infrastructure, treatment sector potentials, and educational potentials, with a total of 12 concepts identified.During the comparative phase, it was found that none of the nursing curricula had adequate prerequisite courses for nurse prescribing. However, the Community Health and Critical Care nursing curricula showed potential for developing nurse prescribing training.
Conclusions
In the nursing education system, there are some challenges and potentials for prescribing training, and the community health and critical care nursing curricula have the potential capacity to prepare the graduated nurses to prescribe. It needs educational and managerial policies. More developmental research and pilot studies are recommended.
7.The Experience of Social Alienation in Elderly Lung Cancer Patients:A Qualitative Study
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):281-287
Purpose:
The aim of this study was to understand the experience of social alienation in elderly lung cancer patients, to explore its causes, and to propose targeted intervention strategies.
Methods:
From July to August 2023, 16 elderly lung cancer patients attending the respiratory department of a tertiary hospital in Changsha City, Hunan Province, were selected for semi-structured interviews using a purposive sampling method. The Colaizzi 7-step method was used to analyze the data.
Results:
A total of four themes were distilled: the experience of social alienation in elderly lung cancer patients (pessimistic feelings, inferiority complex, and heavy psychological burden), subjective causes (disease-included shame, avoidant social behavior, and stigmatized labels), objective causes (isolated social states, and reduced amount of socialization), and rehabilitation support.
Conclusion
The causes of social alienation in elderly lung cancer patients include multiple aspects of personal, family, and social support, and symptom management and psychological guidance should be strengthened for this population to construct a hospitalesocietyefamily triple-linkage care program to help patients recover.
8.Effect of Honey-based Oral Care on Oral Health of Patients With Stroke Undergoing Rehabilitation: A Randomized Controlled Trial
A-Ra CHO ; Hyunmi SON ; Gyumin HAN
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):215-221
Purpose:
To investigate the effects of honey-based oral care on the oral health of patients with stroke undergoing rehabilitation.
Methods:
In this randomized controlled trial, 44 stroke patients from a tertiary hospital’s rehabilitation ward were assigned to receive either honey-based oral care or normal saline, with treatments administered twice daily for 2 weeks. The study, conducted from November 2021 to August 2022, employed a double-blind method, blinding both participants and evaluators to treatment allocations. The key outcomes measured included oral status, dental plaque index (DPI), and xerostomia. The final analysis included 13 patients in the experimental group and 16 in the control group.
Results:
The intervention significantly changed the oral status, DPI, and xerostomia between the groups. The experimental group showed significantly improved oral status (Z = −4.63, p < .001), DPI (Z = −4.58, p < .001), and xerostomia (t = −6.33, p < .001) compared with the control group. The experimental group showed significant improvements in oral status (Z = −3.27, p = .001), DPI (Z = −3.19, p = .001), and xerostomia (t = 7.37, p < .001) after the intervention, confirming the efficacy of honey-based oral care.
Conclusions
Honey-based oral care effectively improves oral status and xerostomia, and reduces DPI in patients with stroke.
9.Subjective Study on Pediatric Emergency Department Nurses 0Perceptions of Urgency Using Q Methodology
Hyeyeon YEON ; Sunhui CHOI ; Danbi PARK ; Min Jeong SEO
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):246-252
Purpose:
In the emergency department (ED), triage significantly impacts patient safety. Therefore, triage nurses must make decisions accurately and timeously. This study aims to investigate how South Korean pediatric emergency nurses perceive urgency and classify severity using the Q methodology, which examines individuals' subjectivity.
Methods:
We collected 84 statements from a Q population based on a literature review and interviews and selected 33 Q samples. The P samples included 30 pediatric emergency nurses at a Seoul tertiary care hospital. The principal component factor analysis method was used to analyze data using the PC-QUANL program.
Results:
Four urgency perception types were identified among pediatric ED nursesdType 1: “Experiential coping”; Type 2: “Careful reasoning”; Type 3: “Patient-centered thinking”; and Type 4: “Intuitive prediction.” These types appear to be an integrated process of knowledge and clinical experience that considers children's characteristics and developmental stages.
Conclusion
This study may serve as a basis for future education to improve pediatric ED nurses 0 urgency judgment and severity classification skills.
10.Lessons for Future Vaccination Policies: COVID-19 Vaccination Intention in People With and Without Chronic Diseases
Jieun JU ; Kihye HAN ; Jieun KIM ; Yunhyung KWON
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(3):288-295
Purpose:
This study compared COVID-19 vaccination intentions in those with and without chronic diseases (CDs and non-CDs) in South Korea. We hypothesized that the factors associated with COVID-19 vaccination intentions would differ between CDs and non-CDs in South Korea.
Methods:
Using survey data collected through a Korean online panel in June 2021, we conducted a crosssectional secondary data analysis. Of the 2292 participants, 411 had at least one chronic disease. To construct a comparable dataset, we selected non-CDs via a 1:1 case-control matching for age and gender.We then utilized a multivariable binary logistic regression model to explore the factors contributing to COVID-19 vaccination intentions in CDs and non-CDs.
Results:
All told, over 75% of participants in both groups indicated that they intended to vaccinate against COVID-19. In both groups, those who mistrusted general vaccine benefits reported significantly lower COVID-19 vaccination intentions. Regarding factors associated with vaccination intentions, CDs identified anxiety regarding coronavirus and exposure to COVID-19 vaccination promotions at the community level, while non-CDs highlighted hesitancy regarding vaccines and confidence in government/health services.
Conclusion
Improving vaccination acceptance will require the development and implementation of tailored approaches for CDs and non-CDs and efforts to minimize general vaccine mistrust.

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