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Cardiac patients’ beliefs about their illness and treatment: A sequential exploratory mixed methods design

Background: Cardiac patients’ beliefs about illness and treatment can disturb their treatment process, treatment regimen adherence, and daily activities. Exploring these beliefs by the use of appropriate, valid, and accurate scales can be helpful in false beliefs reforming by nurses and finally, res...

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Autores principales: Dehghan-nayeri, Nahid, Shali, Mahboubeh, Vaezi, Atefeh, Navabi, Nasrin, Ghaffari, Fatemeh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Iran University of Medical Sciences 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6825381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31696092
http://dx.doi.org/10.34171/mjiri.33.98
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author Dehghan-nayeri, Nahid
Shali, Mahboubeh
Vaezi, Atefeh
Navabi, Nasrin
Ghaffari, Fatemeh
author_facet Dehghan-nayeri, Nahid
Shali, Mahboubeh
Vaezi, Atefeh
Navabi, Nasrin
Ghaffari, Fatemeh
author_sort Dehghan-nayeri, Nahid
collection PubMed
description Background: Cardiac patients’ beliefs about illness and treatment can disturb their treatment process, treatment regimen adherence, and daily activities. Exploring these beliefs by the use of appropriate, valid, and accurate scales can be helpful in false beliefs reforming by nurses and finally, result in life quality promotion. Therefore, this study is conducted to design and psychometry a questionnaire probing about cardiac patients’ beliefs about illness and treatment. Methods: The sequential combination exploratory mixed methods design was used to develop the questionnaire format, which involved two sections: the quantitative and qualitative step. The qualitative step included probing the role of cultural beliefs about illness and treatment in two steps, including the literature and related tools review and fieldwork (semi-structured interviews with cardiac patients). Seventeen studies were checked in the literature review. Twenty-two cardiac patients were selected and interviewed by purposive sampling. The interviews continued up to the data saturation. The data analysis was conducted in both steps using conventional content analysis and textual content analysis. The quantitative step was a methodology study accomplished in two parts. The questionnaire items were formed using the data and items pool in the first part while the psychometric properties of the questionnaire were checked using face, content and construct validity and the reliability was probed using internal consistency and stability in the second part. The data were transferred into SPSS software program, version 18.0 for Windows (α<0.05). Results: 319 codes were extracted from the analyzing phase which formed 6 categories including prognosis, prevention, contexts, treatment efficiency, mentality and lifestyle as well as 9 sub-categories including understanding the danger, attitude toward disease, attitude toward treatment, society’s culture, feeling hopeless, treatment regimen ignorance, self-curing, trying to survive and physical outcomes. The items pool was formed using literature reviews and interviews. A 30-itemed questionnaire was formed after the psychometric process. The Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin (KMO) index and the Bartlett’s test of sphericity showed good results. Six components from the exploratory content analysis including prognosis, prevention, contexts, treatment efficiency, mentality, and lifestyle gained 51.7% variance totally. The interclass correlation coefficient was 0.83 in responding to the items for two times. Conclusion: This study developed a questionnaire about cardiac patients’ beliefs regarding their illness and treatment. It can be used for the educational, research, and treatment purposes as a questionnaire with short, easy, and grammatically simple items that have appropriate validity and reliability. Using this scale can be helpful in evaluating clients’ beliefs and recognize their educational needs.
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spelling pubmed-68253812019-11-06 Cardiac patients’ beliefs about their illness and treatment: A sequential exploratory mixed methods design Dehghan-nayeri, Nahid Shali, Mahboubeh Vaezi, Atefeh Navabi, Nasrin Ghaffari, Fatemeh Med J Islam Repub Iran Original Article Background: Cardiac patients’ beliefs about illness and treatment can disturb their treatment process, treatment regimen adherence, and daily activities. Exploring these beliefs by the use of appropriate, valid, and accurate scales can be helpful in false beliefs reforming by nurses and finally, result in life quality promotion. Therefore, this study is conducted to design and psychometry a questionnaire probing about cardiac patients’ beliefs about illness and treatment. Methods: The sequential combination exploratory mixed methods design was used to develop the questionnaire format, which involved two sections: the quantitative and qualitative step. The qualitative step included probing the role of cultural beliefs about illness and treatment in two steps, including the literature and related tools review and fieldwork (semi-structured interviews with cardiac patients). Seventeen studies were checked in the literature review. Twenty-two cardiac patients were selected and interviewed by purposive sampling. The interviews continued up to the data saturation. The data analysis was conducted in both steps using conventional content analysis and textual content analysis. The quantitative step was a methodology study accomplished in two parts. The questionnaire items were formed using the data and items pool in the first part while the psychometric properties of the questionnaire were checked using face, content and construct validity and the reliability was probed using internal consistency and stability in the second part. The data were transferred into SPSS software program, version 18.0 for Windows (α<0.05). Results: 319 codes were extracted from the analyzing phase which formed 6 categories including prognosis, prevention, contexts, treatment efficiency, mentality and lifestyle as well as 9 sub-categories including understanding the danger, attitude toward disease, attitude toward treatment, society’s culture, feeling hopeless, treatment regimen ignorance, self-curing, trying to survive and physical outcomes. The items pool was formed using literature reviews and interviews. A 30-itemed questionnaire was formed after the psychometric process. The Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin (KMO) index and the Bartlett’s test of sphericity showed good results. Six components from the exploratory content analysis including prognosis, prevention, contexts, treatment efficiency, mentality, and lifestyle gained 51.7% variance totally. The interclass correlation coefficient was 0.83 in responding to the items for two times. Conclusion: This study developed a questionnaire about cardiac patients’ beliefs regarding their illness and treatment. It can be used for the educational, research, and treatment purposes as a questionnaire with short, easy, and grammatically simple items that have appropriate validity and reliability. Using this scale can be helpful in evaluating clients’ beliefs and recognize their educational needs. Iran University of Medical Sciences 2019-09-18 /pmc/articles/PMC6825381/ /pubmed/31696092 http://dx.doi.org/10.34171/mjiri.33.98 Text en © 2019 Iran University of Medical Sciences http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial-ShareAlike 1.0 License (CC BY-NC-SA 1.0), which allows users to read, copy, distribute and make derivative works for non-commercial purposes from the material, as long as the author of the original work is cited properly.
spellingShingle Original Article
Dehghan-nayeri, Nahid
Shali, Mahboubeh
Vaezi, Atefeh
Navabi, Nasrin
Ghaffari, Fatemeh
Cardiac patients’ beliefs about their illness and treatment: A sequential exploratory mixed methods design
title Cardiac patients’ beliefs about their illness and treatment: A sequential exploratory mixed methods design
title_full Cardiac patients’ beliefs about their illness and treatment: A sequential exploratory mixed methods design
title_fullStr Cardiac patients’ beliefs about their illness and treatment: A sequential exploratory mixed methods design
title_full_unstemmed Cardiac patients’ beliefs about their illness and treatment: A sequential exploratory mixed methods design
title_short Cardiac patients’ beliefs about their illness and treatment: A sequential exploratory mixed methods design
title_sort cardiac patients’ beliefs about their illness and treatment: a sequential exploratory mixed methods design
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6825381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31696092
http://dx.doi.org/10.34171/mjiri.33.98
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