Albrecht S A, Rankin M
Matern Child Nurs J. 1989 Spring;18(1):49-60.
The purpose of this correlational descriptive study was to assess health behaviors, anxiety levels, and social support of pregnant women, ages 20 to 40, who were without complications and were patients of four private obstetrical practices in a large metropolitan city. Although sampling was a nonprobability approach, various socioeconomic, racial, and religious groups were represented. The three instruments used to test the hypotheses included the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), the Personal Resource Questionnaire (PRQ) and a detailed Health Behavior Demographic Questionnaire. Results of the data indicated no significant differences between pregnant smokers' and pregnant nonsmokers' STAI or PRQ scores. Significant positive correlations were revealed between the following variables: Trait anxiety with increased age of pregnancy (r = .77, p = .008); trait anxiety with high educational level (r = .72, p = .001); trait anxiety with state anxiety (r = .64, p = .001); trait anxiety with years married (r = .68, p = .018); trait anxiety with numbers of children (r = .82, p = .005); trait anxiety with high occupation level (r = .68, p = .001), increased age with PRQ support (r = -.88, p = .001); caucasian women examined breast more frequently (r = .47, p = .005); pregnant women who were smokers also were more likely to drink (r = .66, p = .03). Significant negative correlations were: Increased state anxiety with decreased social support (r = -.28, p = .05); higher trait anxiety with lower PRQ (r = -.59, p = .001), and more drinks of alcohol per day with decreased social support (r = .88, p = .04). The study indicated that the subjects who continue to smoke while pregnant were highly educated. All had at least two years of college with 45% having completed graduate school. All were working in managerial or professional jobs. This has implications for nursing interventions focused on enhancing health coping strategies at the workplace and specific health promotion activities designed to reduce job-related stress during pregnancy.
这项相关性描述性研究的目的是评估年龄在20至40岁、无并发症且是大城市中四家私立产科诊所患者的孕妇的健康行为、焦虑水平和社会支持情况。尽管抽样采用的是非概率方法,但涵盖了不同的社会经济、种族和宗教群体。用于检验假设的三种工具包括状态-特质焦虑量表(STAI)、个人资源问卷(PRQ)和一份详细的健康行为人口统计学问卷。数据结果表明,怀孕吸烟者和不吸烟者的STAI或PRQ得分之间没有显著差异。以下变量之间呈现出显著的正相关:特质焦虑与怀孕年龄增加(r = 0.77,p = 0.008);特质焦虑与高学历(r = 0.72,p = 0.001);特质焦虑与状态焦虑(r = 0.64,p = 0.001);特质焦虑与结婚年限(r = 0.68,p = 0.018);特质焦虑与子女数量(r = 0.82,p = 0.005);特质焦虑与高职业水平(r = 0.68,p = 0.001),年龄增加与PRQ支持(r = -0.88,p = 0.001);白人女性更频繁地进行乳房检查(r = 0.47,p = 0.005);怀孕吸烟者也更有可能饮酒(r = 0.66,p = 0.03)。显著的负相关为:状态焦虑增加与社会支持减少(r = -0.28,p = 0.05);特质焦虑越高与PRQ越低(r = -0.59,p = 0.001),以及每天饮酒量越多与社会支持减少(r = 0.88,p = 0.04)。该研究表明,怀孕期间继续吸烟的受试者受教育程度较高。所有人至少有两年大学学历,45%的人完成了研究生学业。所有人都从事管理或专业工作。这对旨在加强工作场所健康应对策略的护理干预措施以及旨在减少孕期与工作相关压力的特定健康促进活动具有启示意义。