| Literature DB >> 32930067 |
Yuan-Yuan Song1, Lin Chen2, Wen-Wen Yu2, Wen-Xiu Wang3, Dong-Ju Yang1, Xiao-Lian Jiang1.
Abstract
This cross-sectional study assessed the overall symptom burden, including the prevalence, frequency, severity, and distress of symptoms among hemodialysis patients, and explored the relationship between demographic characteristics, clinical variables, self-management, sense of coherence, social support, and symptom burden in these patients. Herein, a regression analysis was performed to determine associations with symptom burden. The mean score of symptom burden among the participants (n = 382) was 74.12, with an average number of 12 symptoms. The analysis revealed that self-management, sense of coherence, and social support were negatively associated with the overall symptom burden. The multiple regression model showed that 48.6% of the variance in symptom burden was explained by meaningfulness, emotional management, daily urine output, subjective support, gender, and manageability. These findings contribute to the knowledge of symptom burden among hemodialysis patients and some new predictors (self-management, sense of coherence, and social support) of their symptom burden.Entities:
Keywords: end-stage renal disease; hemodialysis; self-management; sense of coherence; social support; symptom burden
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32930067 DOI: 10.1177/0193945920957229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Nurs Res ISSN: 0193-9459 Impact factor: 1.967