The effect of an information brochure on patients undergoing cardiac catheterization on their anxiety, knowledge and fear: A randomized controlled study.

Information Satisfaction Questionnaire (ISQ) State- Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) Surgical Fear Questionnaire (SFQ) information invasive cardiac catheterization

Journal

Health psychology research
ISSN: 2420-8124
Titre abrégé: Health Psychol Res
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101633445

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2022
Historique:
received: 26 11 2021
accepted: 05 04 2022
entrez: 1 7 2022
pubmed: 2 7 2022
medline: 2 7 2022
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Patients who undergo coronary angiography experience a rather stressful situation. They need information about this invasive procedure which most of the times find either from the internet, their referring physicians, acquaintances or friends with past experience of an invasive procedure. The aim of the study was on the one hand to test the potential beneficial effects of an information brochure on undergoing a cardiac catheterization for the first time and on the other hand to highlight the importance of informing patients before coronary angiography and its beneficial effects on both reducing their fear and anxiety. Patients were randomly assigned to an experimental group receiving the brochure at least 1 day before the cardiac catheterization (N = 44), or to a control group not receiving the brochure (N = 44). The SFQ, ISQ and STAI tools were distributed to both groups. All experimental subjects in the intervention group read the brochure. The intervention group had significantly lower scores on both short-term and overall fear compared to the control group. However, the fear of the long-term consequences of cardiac catheterization was similar in both groups. Women had higher fear of the short-term consequences of catheterization than men. The control group experienced a mean satisfaction score of 10.9 points (SD= 2.5 points) while the intervention group had a score of 11.1 points respectively (SD= 2.3 points). In addition, 95, 5% of the control group and 88, 6% of the intervention group patients considered that the provision of information could have been improved. In terms of stress, patients with co-morbidities scored 7.39 points higher, meaning they experienced more symptoms of permanent anxiety, compared to patients who did not have an underlying disease. In addition, the more the patients were satisfied with the information provided, the fewer the symptoms of transient anxiety they experienced. Providing information in the form of a brochure regarding cardiac catheterization before the procedure, is of great importance and constitutes an efficient intervention.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35774898
doi: 10.52965/001c.35640
pii: 35640
pmc: PMC9239369
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

35640

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

There is no conflict of Interest

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Auteurs

Maria Malliarou (M)

Faculty of Nursing, University of Thessaly.

Vasiliki Pappa (V)

Hellenic Open University.

Iokasti Papathanasiou (I)

Faculty of Nursing, University of Thessaly.

Ilias Andreanidis (I)

401 General Military Hospital.

Athanasios Nikolentzos (A)

Hellenic Open University.

Ioannis Apostolakis (I)

Hellenic Open University.

Classifications MeSH