International Journal of Nursing Sciences | 2021

Relationship between negative emotions and perceived support among parents of hospitalized, critically ill children

 
 
 

Abstract


Objectives The purpose of this study was to describe relationships between negative emotions and perceived emotional support in parents of children admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Methods This cross-sectional descriptive study conducted face-to-face interviews between January 2019 and January 2020. Study variables included depression (PHQ-9 Scale), anxiety (Emotional Distress-Anxiety-Short Form 8a), anger (Emotional Distress-Anger-Short Form 5a), fear (Fear-Affect Computerized Adaptive Test), somatic fear (Fear-Somatic Arousal-Fixed Form), loneliness (Revised 20-item UCLA Loneliness Scale), and perceived emotional support (Emotional Support-Fixed Form). Results Eighty parents reported symptoms of depression 8.00(4.00, 13.75), anxiety (23.43 ± 7.80), anger (13.40 ± 5.46), fear (72.81 ± 27.26), somatic fear 9.00(6.00, 12.75), loneliness (39.35 ± 12.00), and low perceived emotional support (32.14 ± 8.06). Parents who were young, single, low-income, and with limited-post secondary education reported greater loneliness and lower perceived emotional support. Fear correlated with depression (r = 0.737, P < 0.01) and anxiety (r=0.900, P < 0.01). Inverse relationships were discovered between perceived emotional support and loneliness (r = −0.767, P < 0.01), anger (r=-0.401, P < 0.01), and depression (r = −0.334, P < 0.01). Conclusions The cluster of negative emotions identified will serve as potential targets for future interventions designed to enhance support for parents of critically ill children.

Volume 8
Pages 15 - 21
DOI 10.1016/j.ijnss.2020.10.001
Language English
Journal International Journal of Nursing Sciences

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