JURNAL INTERNASIONAL KEBIDANAN 2020-2023 UNIVERSITAS KEDOKTERAN GUILAN VOLUME 30 ISSUE 2.
JOURNAL OF HOLISTIC NURSING OF MIDWIFERY.
Death Anxiety and Its Predictors Among Older Adults
Dublin Core
Title
JURNAL INTERNASIONAL KEBIDANAN 2020-2023 UNIVERSITAS KEDOKTERAN GUILAN VOLUME 30 ISSUE 2.
JOURNAL OF HOLISTIC NURSING OF MIDWIFERY.
Death Anxiety and Its Predictors Among Older Adults
JOURNAL OF HOLISTIC NURSING OF MIDWIFERY.
Death Anxiety and Its Predictors Among Older Adults
Subject
Death anxiety, Hospitalization, Older adulthood
Description
Introduction: Death anxiety can negatively affect recovery among older patients.
Objective: study aimed to assess death anxiety and its predictors among older adults during
and after hospitalization.
Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted in 2017 on 241
hospitalized patients aged ≥60 years. The study subjects were consecutively recruited from
a hospital in Kashan City, Iran. The required data were collected in the first and the third
hospitalization days (T1 and T2) and the seventh day after hospital discharge (T3) using
the Mini-Mental State Examination, a Death Anxiety Contributing Factors questionnaire,
the Templer Death Anxiety Scale, the Life Satisfaction Index-Z Scale, and the Spiritual
Well-Being Scale. For the statistical evaluation, repeated measures Analysis of Variance
(ANOVA), the stepwise multiple linear regression, and the rank regression analyses were
used.
Results: The Mean±SD score of death anxiety at T1–T3 was 6.74±3.81, 7.38±3.64, and
6.18±3.60, respectively. Death anxiety at T2 was significantly greater than T1 and T3
(P=0.0001). Approximately 17.7% of the total variance of death anxiety at T1 was explained
by the number of hospitalizations, satisfaction with hospital staff’s performance, and spiritual
well-being. The significant predictors of death anxiety at T2 were marital status, satisfaction
with hospital staff’s performance, children’s gender, satisfaction with bed arrangement, age,
and the number of hospitalizations, which explained 32.1% of the total variance. Moreover,
15.4% of the variance at T3 was explained by satisfaction with bed arrangement and receiving
education at hospital discharge.
Conclusion: Older adults suffer from moderate death anxiety during and after their
hospitalization due to various factors. Managing death anxiety contributing factors is
necessary to alleviate it among older adults.
Objective: study aimed to assess death anxiety and its predictors among older adults during
and after hospitalization.
Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted in 2017 on 241
hospitalized patients aged ≥60 years. The study subjects were consecutively recruited from
a hospital in Kashan City, Iran. The required data were collected in the first and the third
hospitalization days (T1 and T2) and the seventh day after hospital discharge (T3) using
the Mini-Mental State Examination, a Death Anxiety Contributing Factors questionnaire,
the Templer Death Anxiety Scale, the Life Satisfaction Index-Z Scale, and the Spiritual
Well-Being Scale. For the statistical evaluation, repeated measures Analysis of Variance
(ANOVA), the stepwise multiple linear regression, and the rank regression analyses were
used.
Results: The Mean±SD score of death anxiety at T1–T3 was 6.74±3.81, 7.38±3.64, and
6.18±3.60, respectively. Death anxiety at T2 was significantly greater than T1 and T3
(P=0.0001). Approximately 17.7% of the total variance of death anxiety at T1 was explained
by the number of hospitalizations, satisfaction with hospital staff’s performance, and spiritual
well-being. The significant predictors of death anxiety at T2 were marital status, satisfaction
with hospital staff’s performance, children’s gender, satisfaction with bed arrangement, age,
and the number of hospitalizations, which explained 32.1% of the total variance. Moreover,
15.4% of the variance at T3 was explained by satisfaction with bed arrangement and receiving
education at hospital discharge.
Conclusion: Older adults suffer from moderate death anxiety during and after their
hospitalization due to various factors. Managing death anxiety contributing factors is
necessary to alleviate it among older adults.
Creator
Zahra Zahedi Bidgoli , Zahra Tagharrobi , Zahra Sooki , Khadijeh Sharifi
Date
April 2020, Volume 30, Number 2
Contributor
PERI IRAWAN
Format
PDF
Language
english
Type
TEXT
Files
Citation
Zahra Zahedi Bidgoli , Zahra Tagharrobi , Zahra Sooki , Khadijeh Sharifi, “JURNAL INTERNASIONAL KEBIDANAN 2020-2023 UNIVERSITAS KEDOKTERAN GUILAN VOLUME 30 ISSUE 2.
JOURNAL OF HOLISTIC NURSING OF MIDWIFERY.
Death Anxiety and Its Predictors Among Older Adults,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed October 13, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/784.
JOURNAL OF HOLISTIC NURSING OF MIDWIFERY.
Death Anxiety and Its Predictors Among Older Adults,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed October 13, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/784.