Hui Ren, PhD, RN, ET, The First Hospital of Jilin University, and School of Public Health, Jilin University, Changchun, China.
Daguang Wang, PhD, Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, The First Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun, China.
J Wound Ostomy Continence Nurs. 2021;48(4):300-305. doi: 10.1097/WON.0000000000000767.
We sought to explore the relationships among social support, health-related quality of life (HRQOL), and wound pain, and to examine whether social support would moderate the relationship between wound pain and HRQOL.
A multicenter descriptive cross-sectional study.
Individuals with chronic wounds attending wound clinics affiliated with 3 public hospitals in Beijing, China.
Sociodemographic and wound characteristics of 162 participants were retrieved from medical records. Participants completed questionnaires for wound-related pain intensity (Numerical Rating Scale), social support (Social Support Rating Scale), and HRQOL (Medical Outcome Study Short Form-36). The moderating effect analysis was examined using the PROCESS analytic tool developed by Hayes, based on the bias-corrected bootstrapping method.
Results revealed that higher pain intensity was significantly related to lower HRQOL (P < .01), and higher social support was associated with better HRQOL (P < .01). However, there was no significant correlation between social support and wound pain (P = .55). Importantly, the moderating effect of social support on the relationship between wound pain and HRQOL was statistically significant (P = .008).
We found that social support moderated the impact of wound pain on HRQOL in patients with chronic wounds. This finding suggests that support obtained from social networks may be a beneficial intervention to improve the HRQOL of patients with chronic wounds, especially those suffering from high-intensity wound pain.
本研究旨在探讨社会支持、健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)与伤口疼痛之间的关系,并检验社会支持是否能调节伤口疼痛与 HRQOL 之间的关系。
多中心描述性横断面研究。
本研究对象为在北京的 3 家公立医院的伤口门诊就诊的慢性伤口患者。
从病历中提取了 162 名参与者的社会人口学和伤口特征。参与者完成了与伤口相关的疼痛强度(数字评分量表)、社会支持(社会支持评定量表)和 HRQOL(医疗结局研究短式 36 量表)的问卷调查。采用 Hayes 开发的 PROCESS 分析工具,基于偏差校正的自助法,对调节效应进行分析。
结果表明,更高的疼痛强度与更低的 HRQOL 显著相关(P <.01),更高的社会支持与更好的 HRQOL 相关(P <.01)。然而,社会支持与伤口疼痛之间没有显著相关性(P =.55)。重要的是,社会支持对伤口疼痛与 HRQOL 之间关系的调节作用具有统计学意义(P =.008)。
我们发现,社会支持调节了慢性伤口患者伤口疼痛对 HRQOL 的影响。这一发现表明,从社交网络中获得的支持可能是改善慢性伤口患者 HRQOL 的有益干预措施,尤其是那些遭受高强度伤口疼痛的患者。