Lee Christopher S, Riegel Barbara, Driscoll Andrea, Suwanno Jom, Moser Debra K, Lennie Terry A, Dickson Victoria V, Cameron Jan, Worrall-Carter Linda
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, 418 Curie Blvd, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6096, USA.
Int J Nurs Stud. 2009 Nov;46(11):1485-95. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2009.04.004. Epub 2009 May 13.
Despite a common view that women are better at self-care, there is very little evidence to support or challenge this perspective in the heart failure (HF) population.
The purpose of this study was to determine if there are cross-cultural gender differences in self-reported HF self-care and to describe gender differences in the determinants of HF self-care.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A secondary analysis was completed of cross-sectional study data collected on 2082 adults with chronic HF from the United States, Australia and Thailand.
Comparisons were made between men and women regarding self-care maintenance, management and confidence as assessed by the Self-Care of Heart Failure Index, as well as the proportion of subjects engaged in adequate self-care. Multivariate comparisons were made to determine if gender explained sufficient variance in HF self-care and the likelihood of reporting adequate self-care, controlling for nine model covariates.
The sample was comprised of 1306 men and 776 women. Most (73.5%) had systolic or mixed systolic and diastolic HF and 45% had New York Heart Association class III or IV HF. Although small and clinically insignificant gender differences were found in self-care maintenance, gender was not a determinant of any aspect of HF self-care in multivariate models. Married women were 37% less likely to report adequate self-care maintenance than unmarried women. Comorbidities only influenced the HF self-care of men. Being newly diagnosed with HF also primarily affected men. Patients with diastolic HF (predominantly women) had poorer self-care maintenance and less confidence in self-care.
Differences in HF self-care are attributable to factors other than gender; however, there are several gender-specific determinants of HF self-care that help identify patients at risk for practicing poor self-care.
尽管人们普遍认为女性更善于自我护理,但在心力衰竭(HF)人群中,几乎没有证据支持或反驳这一观点。
本研究旨在确定自我报告的HF自我护理方面是否存在跨文化性别差异,并描述HF自我护理决定因素中的性别差异。
设计、设置和参与者:对从美国、澳大利亚和泰国收集的2082名慢性HF成人的横断面研究数据进行了二次分析。
比较男性和女性在通过心力衰竭自我护理指数评估的自我护理维持、管理和信心方面的差异,以及进行充分自我护理的受试者比例。进行多变量比较以确定性别是否能解释HF自我护理中足够的差异以及报告充分自我护理的可能性,同时控制九个模型协变量。
样本包括1306名男性和776名女性。大多数(73.5%)患有收缩期或收缩期与舒张期混合型HF,45%患有纽约心脏协会III级或IV级HF。尽管在自我护理维持方面发现了微小且临床意义不大的性别差异,但在多变量模型中,性别并不是HF自我护理任何方面的决定因素。已婚女性报告充分自我护理维持的可能性比未婚女性低37%。合并症仅影响男性的HF自我护理。新诊断为HF也主要影响男性。舒张期HF患者(主要为女性)的自我护理维持较差,对自我护理的信心较低。
HF自我护理的差异归因于性别以外的因素;然而,有几个HF自我护理的性别特异性决定因素有助于识别自我护理不佳风险的患者。