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Frontiers in Psychiatry 2024The concept of caring stress and its specific management has received less attention than other dimensions of stress in nurses. Therefore, to clarify the concept of...
OBJECTIVE
The concept of caring stress and its specific management has received less attention than other dimensions of stress in nurses. Therefore, to clarify the concept of caring stress, a scoping review study was designed. This scoping review aimed to investigate the concept of caring stress among clinical nurses and examine the strategies used for its management.
METHODS
This review employed a scoping review methodology to comprehensively map the essential concepts and attributes of the phenomenon by drawing on a wide range of sources. International databases including PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and Scientific Information Database (SID) were searched to gather relevant studies published until October 1, 2023. MESH terms included "caring stress", "care", "stress", "nurse", and "stress management" were used. Two reviewers independently collected data from full-text papers, ensuring that each paper underwent assessment by at least two reviewers.
RESULTS
Out of 104,094 articles initially searched, 22 articles were included in this study. High workloads, transmitting the infection, stressful thoughts, stressful emotions, and stressful communications were the significant concepts and factors of caring stress among nurses. Also, rest breaks during patient care shifts, playing music in the ward, and denial of critical situations were examples of positive and negative coping and management ways to reduce caring stress.
CONCLUSION
Effective stress management strategies can lead to better patient care and safety. Stressed nurses are more likely to make errors or become less vigilant in their duties, impacting patient outcomes. By addressing caring stress, clinical practice can prioritize patient well-being. Further research is required to delve deeper into this critical issue concerning nurses in the future.
PubMed: 38863606
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1337938 -
Frontiers in Psychiatry 2024Hikikomori (prolonged social withdrawal) has been discussed as a hidden worldwide epidemic and a significant social and healthcare issue. Social anxiety disorder is the...
Hikikomori (prolonged social withdrawal) has been discussed as a hidden worldwide epidemic and a significant social and healthcare issue. Social anxiety disorder is the most common psychiatric disorder preceding the onset of Hikikomori. Although studies exist suggesting the effectiveness of family-support interventions, little is known about psychotherapeutic approaches for Hikikomori individuals. Here, we present a case of Hikikomori wherein an internet-delivered cognitive therapy for social anxiety disorder (iCT-SAD) worked effectively in improving the client's social anxiety symptoms and social interaction behaviors. This case study demonstrates the principle that evidence-based psychological interventions focusing on social anxiety can be effective for clients with Hikikomori. Furthermore, the online mode of treatment delivery, along with a variety of relevant modules, may facilitate clients' engagement with treatment at home. The findings suggest that iCT-SAD might be a promising option for Hikikomori clients who have social anxiety problems, within the recommended stepped-intervention approach.
PubMed: 38863603
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1368722 -
Acute and Critical Care May 2024Sleep disorders are common among patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs). This study aimed to assess the perceptions of sleep quality, anxiety, depression, and...
BACKGROUND
Sleep disorders are common among patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs). This study aimed to assess the perceptions of sleep quality, anxiety, depression, and stress reported by ICU patients and the relationships between these perceptions and patient variables.
METHODS
This cross-sectional study used consecutive non-probabilistic sampling to select participants. All patients admitted for more than 72 hours of ICU hospitalization at a Portuguese hospital between March and June 2020 were asked to complete the "Richard Campbell Sleep Questionnaire" and "Anxiety, depression, and Stress Assessment Questionnaire." The resulting data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Pearson's correlation coefficient, Student t-tests for independent samples, and analysis of variance. The significance level for rejecting the null hypothesis was set to α ≤0.05.
RESULTS
A total of 52 patients admitted to the ICU for at least 72 hours was recruited. The mean age of the participants was 64 years (standard deviation, 14.6); 32 (61.5%) of the participants were male. Approximately 19% had psychiatric disorders. The prevalence of self-reported poor sleep was higher in women (t[50]=2,147, P=0.037) and in participants with psychiatric problems, although this difference was not statistically significant (t[50]=-0.777, P=0.441). Those who reported having sleep disorders before hospitalization had a worse perception of their sleep.
CONCLUSIONS
Sleep quality perception was worse in female ICU patients, those with psychiatric disorders, and those with sleep alterations before hospitalization. Implementing early interventions and designing nonpharmacological techniques to improve sleep quality of ICU patients is essential.
PubMed: 38863362
DOI: 10.4266/acc.2023.01256 -
Actas Espanolas de Psiquiatria Jun 2024Psychiatric nurses are vulnerable to the menace of negative emotions due to the nature of their work and the closed environment in which they work. In this study, we...
BACKGROUND
Psychiatric nurses are vulnerable to the menace of negative emotions due to the nature of their work and the closed environment in which they work. In this study, we aimed to investigate the incidence and influencing factors of depression among psychiatric nurses.
METHODS
A cross-sectional survey method was adopted to investigate 64 nurses working in the psychiatric department of a hospital from June 2022 to June 2023. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) questionnaire was administered to all included respondents, who were divided into depressed group (>4 points) and non-depressed group (≤4 points) according to the BDI scores. General sociological and disease-related characteristics of these two groups were measured, and items with significant differences were analyzed by logistic regression to derive factors that have an impact on the occurrence of depression among psychiatric nurses.
RESULTS
Twelve psychiatric nurses in the surveyed hospital exhibited signs of depressive symptoms, with a rate of 18.75%. The univariate analysis unveiled differences between the depressed group and the non-depressed group in terms of daily sleep time, weekly working hours, professional title, working pressure, physical exercise, length of service, and physical condition. Further analysis through logistic regression revealed that daily sleep time, weekly working hours, and physical condition were factors affecting the occurrence of depression among psychiatric nurses.
CONCLUSION
The vulnerability of psychiatric nurses to depression, which are potentially influenced by daily sleep hours, weekly working hours, and physical condition, deserves clinical attention so that countermeasures can be developed for early intervention.
Topics: Humans; Cross-Sectional Studies; Female; Adult; Depression; Male; Psychiatric Nursing; Nursing Staff, Hospital; Middle Aged; Incidence; Surveys and Questionnaires
PubMed: 38863051
DOI: 10.62641/aep.v52i3.1609 -
Actas Espanolas de Psiquiatria Jun 2024Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a type of psychiatric disorder characterized by multiple symptoms. Our aim is to decipher the relevant mechanisms of immune-related gene...
BACKGROUND
Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a type of psychiatric disorder characterized by multiple symptoms. Our aim is to decipher the relevant mechanisms of immune-related gene signatures in SCZ.
METHODS
The SCZ dataset and its associated immunoregulatory genes were retrieved using Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) and single-sample gene set enrichment analysis (ssGSEA). Co-expressed gene modules were determined through weighted gene correlation network analysis (WGCNA). To elucidate the functional characteristics of these clusters, Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) analyses were used. Additionally, gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) and Gene Set Variation Analysis (GSVA) were conducted to identify enriched pathways for the immune subgroups. A protein-protein interaction (PPI) network analysis was performed to identify core genes relevant to SCZ.
RESULTS
A significantly higher immune score was observed in SCZ compared to control samples. Seven distinct gene modules were identified, with genes highlighted in green selected for further analysis. Using the Cell-type Identification By Estimating Relative Subsets Of RNA Transcripts (CIBERSORT) method, degrees of immune cell adhesion and accumulation related to 22 different immune cell types were calculated. Significantly enriched bioprocesses concerning the immunoregulatory genes with differential expressions included interferon-beta, IgG binding, and response to interferon-gamma, according to GO and KEGG analyses. Eleven hub genes related to immune infiltration emerged as key players among the three top-ranked GO terms.
CONCLUSIONS
This study underscores the involvement of immunoregulatory reactions in SCZ development. Eleven immune-related genes (IFITM1 (interferon induced transmembrane protein 1), GBP1 (guanylate binding protein 1), BST2 (bone marrow stromal cell antigen 2), IFITM3 (interferon induced transmembrane protein 3), GBP2 (guanylate binding protein 2), CD44 (CD44 molecule), FCER1G (Fc epsilon receptor Ig), HLA-DRA (major histocompatibility complex, class II, DR alpha), FCGR2A (Fc gamma receptor IIa), IFI16 (interferon gamma inducible protein 16), and FCGR3B (Fc gamma receptor IIIb)) were identified as hub genes, representing potential biomarkers and therapeutic targets associated with the immune response in SCZ patients.
Topics: Humans; Schizophrenia; Gene Expression Profiling
PubMed: 38863043
DOI: 10.62641/aep.v52i3.1648 -
Drugs & Aging Jun 2024International guidelines discourage antipsychotic use for delirium; however, concerns persist about their continued use in clinical practice.
BACKGROUND
International guidelines discourage antipsychotic use for delirium; however, concerns persist about their continued use in clinical practice.
OBJECTIVES
We aimed to describe the prevalence and patterns of antipsychotic use in delirium management with regard to best-practice recommendations. Primary outcomes investigated were prevalence of use, antipsychotic type, dosage and clinical indication.
METHODS
Eligibility criteria: studies of any design that examined antipsychotic use to manage delirium in adults in critical care, acute care, palliative care, rehabilitation, and aged care were included. Studies of patients in acute psychiatric care, with psychiatric illness or pre-existing antipsychotic use were excluded.
INFORMATION SOURCES
we searched five health databases on 16 August, 2023 (PubMed, CINAHL, Embase, APA PsycInfo, ProQuest Health and Medical Collection) using MeSH terms and relevant keywords, including 'delirium' and 'antipsychotic'. Risk of bias: as no included studies were randomised controlled trials, all studies were assessed for methodological quality using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool.
SYNTHESIS OF RESULTS
descriptive data were extracted in Covidence and synthesised in Microsoft Excel.
RESULTS
Included studies: 39 studies published between March 2004 and August 2023 from 13 countries (n = 1,359,519 patients). Most study designs were retrospective medical record audits (n = 16).
SYNTHESIS OF RESULTS
in 18 studies, participants' mean age was ≥65 years (77.79, ±5.20). Palliative care had the highest average proportion of patients with delirium managed with antipsychotics (70.87%, ±33.81%); it was lower and varied little between intensive care unit (53.53%, ±19.73%) and non-intensive care unit settings [medical, surgical and any acute care wards] (56.93%, ±26.44%) and was lowest in in-patient rehabilitation (17.8%). Seventeen different antipsychotics were reported on. In patients aged ≥65 years, haloperidol was the most frequently used and at higher than recommended mean daily doses (2.75 mg, ±2.21 mg). Other antipsychotics commonly administered were olanzapine (mean 11 mg, ±8.54 mg), quetiapine (mean 64.23 mg, ±43.20 mg) and risperidone (mean 0.97 mg, ±0.64 mg).
CONCLUSIONS
The use of antipsychotics to manage delirium is strongly discouraged in international guidelines. Antipsychotic use in delirium care is a risk for adverse health outcomes and a longer duration of delirium, especially in older people. However, this study has provided evidence that clinicians continue to use antipsychotics for delirium management, the dose, frequency and duration of which are often outside evidence-based guideline recommendations. Clinicians continue to choose antipsychotics to manage delirium symptoms to settle agitation and maintain patient and staff safety, particularly in situations where workload pressures are high. Sustained efforts are needed at the individual, team and organisational levels to educate, train and support clinicians to prioritise non-pharmacological interventions early before deciding to use antipsychotics. This could prevent delirium and avert escalation in behavioural symptoms that often lead to antipsychotic use.
Topics: Humans; Delirium; Antipsychotic Agents; Aged; Adult; Hospitals
PubMed: 38856874
DOI: 10.1007/s40266-024-01122-z -
The South African Journal of Psychiatry... 2023Family members play an important role in caring for state patients during their admission to a psychiatric hospital. They receive limited support from the...
BACKGROUND
Family members play an important role in caring for state patients during their admission to a psychiatric hospital. They receive limited support from the multidisciplinary team because they do not have a relationship that will promote the families to verbalise their thoughts, rather the interaction that the multidisciplinary team and family members share is about the admitted state patient.
AIM
This article explored and described the experiences of family members who have a relative admitted as a state patient in a psychiatric hospital. Based on the findings, specific recommendations were provided to facilitate the mental health of state patients' family members in the future.
SETTING
The study was conducted in participants' homes; only one interview took place in the psychiatric hospital when the family member came to meet the multidisciplinary team.
METHODS
The study employed a qualitative, exploratory and contextual research design. Family members' lived experiences were explored using in-depth phenomenological interviews and later analysed.
RESULTS
The findings indicated family members experienced negative feelings, a sincere desire to support their relatives and a great need to share information and knowledge about mental illness.
CONCLUSION
The study indicated that state patients' family members' mental health should be focused on to improve their understanding of mental illness.
CONTRIBUTION
The findings of this study call for collaboration between the family members, the police and multidisciplinary teams from the hospitals, the mental health awareness and counselling for families.
PubMed: 38855417
DOI: 10.4102/sajpsychiatry.v29i0.1958 -
SAGE Open Nursing 2024Nurses, comprising the largest profession in healthcare, play a significant role in the identification and management of mental health disorders in hospitals.
INTRODUCTION
Nurses, comprising the largest profession in healthcare, play a significant role in the identification and management of mental health disorders in hospitals.
OBJECTIVES
The study assessed the knowledge and attitudes of non-psychiatric nurses and their encounters with depressive patients throughout their careers.
METHODS
This was a cross-sectional descriptive study with 400 non-psychiatric nurses from different hospitals in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq during October and November 2022. The independent Student's -test, one-way analysis of variance, and binary logistic regression were used to assess possible factors associated with knowledge and attitude toward depression.
RESULTS
In this study, 400 non-psychiatric nurses were examined, revealing a mean age of 31.57 ± 8.59 years. Their mean scores for knowledge and attitude toward depression were 5.41 out of a maximum of 11 (standard deviation 1.15) and 5.15 out of 18 (standard deviation 1.83), respectively. Notably, differences in mean knowledge scores were observed concerning participant marital status ( = .044), while disparities in mean attitude scores are related to participant gender ( = .010). Upon binary logistic regression analysis, none of the independent variables exhibited an association with good knowledge. Nevertheless, gender emerged as a significant factor influencing attitude toward depression (odds ratio: 0.51; 95% confidence interval: 0.30-0.86; = .012). Subsequently, in the multivariate binary logistic regression analysis, gender sustained significance (adjusted odds ratio: 0.573; 95% confidence interval: 0.348-0.942; = .028) as the key variable impacting attitudes toward depression among non-psychiatric nurses.
CONCLUSION
Based on the results of this study, nurses have insufficient awareness and management skills for depression. It has been experienced and reported that nurses lack knowledge and an attitude toward depression management. The study highlights a significant gap in nurses' skills for managing depression, urging the immediate improvement of training programs. Customizing these programs to enhance nurses' abilities in identifying and managing depression is crucial.
PubMed: 38854696
DOI: 10.1177/23779608241260862 -
BMJ Open Jun 2024There is a lack of distinct and measurable outcomes in psychiatric and/or mental health nursing which negatively impacts guiding clinical practice, assessing...
INTRODUCTION
There is a lack of distinct and measurable outcomes in psychiatric and/or mental health nursing which negatively impacts guiding clinical practice, assessing evidence-based nursing interventions, ensuring future-proof nursing education and establishing visibility as a profession and discipline. Psychiatric and/or mental health nursing struggle to demonstrate patient-reported outcomes to assess the effectiveness of their practice. A systematic review that summarising patient-reported outcomes, associated factors, measured nursing care/interventions and used measurement scales of psychiatric and/or mental health nursing in the adult population in acute, intensive and forensic psychiatric wards in hospitals will capture important information on how care can be improved by better understanding what matters and what is important to patients themselves. This review can contribute to the design, planning, delivery and assessment of the quality of current and future nursing care METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This protocol follows the Cochrane methodological guidance on systematic reviews of interventions and The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Protocol. The search strategy will be identified by consultations with clinical and methodological experts and by exploring the literature. The databases Ovid MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, APA PsychARTICLES, Web of Science and Scopus will be searched for all published studies. Studies will be screened and selected with criteria described in the population, intervention, control and outcomes format after a pilot test by two researchers. Studies will be screened in two stages: (1) title and abstract screening and (2) full-text screening. Data extraction and the quality assessment based on the Johanna Briggs Institute guidelines will be conducted by two researchers. Data will be presented in a narrative synthesis.
ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION
No ethical approval is needed since all data are already publicly accessible. The results of this work will be published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.
PROSPERO REGISTRATION NUMBER
CRD42023363806.
Topics: Humans; Systematic Reviews as Topic; Patient Reported Outcome Measures; Psychiatric Nursing; Research Design; Mental Disorders
PubMed: 38851230
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-085808 -
Indian Journal of Public Health Jan 2024Depression is a serious illness; approximately 40%-60% of patients develop relapse, and this risk increases up to 90%. Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) is an effective... (Randomized Controlled Trial)
Randomized Controlled Trial
A Randomized Control Trial Study to Assess the Effectiveness of Interpersonal Psychotherapy on Symptom Reduction and Relapse Prevention for Depression among the Depression Patients.
BACKGROUND
Depression is a serious illness; approximately 40%-60% of patients develop relapse, and this risk increases up to 90%. Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) is an effective method to minimize depressive symptoms and relapse.
OBJECTIVES
This randomized control trial study is designed to assess the effectiveness of IPT on depression symptom reduction and relapse prevention.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Three hundred depressed patients from a selected psychiatric hospital in UP, India, were recruited by a simple random sampling technique that randomly allocated 150 participants to the experimental group and 150 to the control group by tossing a coin. Depressive symptoms were assessed using the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, which has 17 items. On the 2nd day of the trial, the experimental group received IPT. It helped the participants recognize their emotions and urge themselves to express them, both of which had a direct positive impact on their sad mood. The IPT efficacy assessment was done at the end of the 4 weeks of the intervention, and the relapse prevention assessment was undertaken 4 months later. The control group was kept with the actual treatment modalities and psychoeducation sessions, and they were assessed in the same way as the experimental group.
RESULTS
Findings illustrated that the reduction of depressive symptoms with (t = 33.61) (P = 0.0000) and relapse prevention with (t = 2.7484) (P = 0.0067) are significant, respectively. Furthermore, symptom reduction and relapse prevention had an association with some demographical data at P < 0.05, 0.001.
CONCLUSION
IPT is an effective intervention for reducing depressive symptoms and preventing relapse.
Topics: Humans; Male; Female; Adult; Secondary Prevention; India; Depression; Interpersonal Psychotherapy; Middle Aged; Young Adult; Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
PubMed: 38847631
DOI: 10.4103/ijph.ijph_26_22