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☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Clinical Nursing

Self‐Efficacy and e‐Health Literacy Among Caregivers of Patients With Lung Cancer: The Chain‐Mediating Roles of Negative Emotions and Caregiver Readiness

Por: Jiali Wu · Congling Li · Xianning Wu · Dan Su — Mayo 15th 2025 at 05:26

ABSTRACT

Objectives

To explore the chain-mediating roles of negative emotions and caregiver readiness between self-efficacy and e-health literacy among caregivers of patients with lung cancer.

Background

With the rise of Internet health services, caregivers of patients with lung cancer, who are one of the health decision makers, are encountering new challenges. In order to develop appropriate interventions, it is necessary to explore in depth the various influencing factors associated with them.

Design

A cross-sectional survey.

Methods

A total of 293 caregivers of patients with lung cancer were recruited between November 2023 and April 2024 through a convenience sampling method. These participants completed the demographic data questionnaire, General Self-Efficacy Scale (GSES), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), Caregivers Preparedness Scale (CPS), and eHealth Literacy Scale (eHEALS). Independent samples t-tests and a one-way ANOVA were employed to identify the primary influencing factors. Structural equation modelling was employed to detect the mediating effects of negative emotions and caregiver readiness.

Reporting Method

The STROBE checklist was used for this study.

Results

The total e-health literacy score of caregivers of patients with lung cancer was 29.65 ± 7.11, and there was a correlation between self-efficacy, negative emotions, caregiver readiness, and e-health literacy. The results of the path analysis showed that negative emotions and caregiver readiness had chain-mediating roles between self-efficacy and e-health literacy among caregivers of patients with lung cancer, with the total indirect effect accounting for 31.17% of the total effect.

Conclusions

Caregivers of patients with lung cancer exhibit moderate levels of e-health literacy. This research suggests that self-efficacy not only has a direct and positive influence on e-health literacy but may also amplify it by mediating the interplay between negative emotions and caregiver readiness.

Relevance to Clinical Practice

Healthcare providers should be cognizant of the negative emotions and readiness displayed by family caregivers in the hospital setting to aid them in cultivating strong health literacy for more efficient management of illness care tasks.

Patient or Public Contribution

Nurses at the hospitals assisted us in collecting data from family caregivers of patients with lung cancer, and the caregivers actively cooperated in completing the questionnaires.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Clinical Nursing

A Scoping Review of Observational Research on Cannabis Use for Symptom Management in HIV and Cancer: Implications for Cannabis Nursing

Por: Hwayoung Cho · Elena Kalina · Jianli Wu · Robert Cook · Ramzi Salloum · Yiyang Liu · Jiang Bian · Jingchuan Guo · Angela Starkweather — Noviembre 28th 2024 at 03:59

ABSTRACT

Background

People with HIV have a higher risk of developing non-AIDS-defining cancers in older age, leading to a significant population living with two conditions, HIV and cancer. There is an increasing interest in cannabis use for symptom management in people with chronic conditions; in 2023, the American Nurses Association officially recognised cannabis nursing as a specialty nursing practice focusing on the care of individuals seeking education/guidance in the therapeutic use of cannabis, supporting the urgency of its research. However, the scientific literature lacks a synthesised review in the focused populations.

Aim

To explore observational research on cannabis use for symptom management among people with HIV and/or cancer and identify gaps in current knowledge to inform future research and policy development.

Methods

Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) checklist, a literature search of relevant articles was conducted in the databases PubMed (n = 552), PsycInfo (n = 204), CINAHL (n = 164) and Embase (n = 976). Upon screening 1738 articles, 142 were identified for full-text review and 51 were retained for data extraction.

Results

There were more studies evaluating cannabis use among people with cancer than with HIV and no studies among people living with comorbid HIV and cancer. Most studies were cross-sectional with limited metrics on the perceived effectiveness and safety of cannabis use for symptom management and its dosing/mode of delivery for reducing symptoms. While studies focused on cannabis therapy under the provision of healthcare providers, individuals reported obtaining information about cannabis from friends/family/the Internet.

Implications for Cannabis Nursing

This body of research could be strengthened by rigorous longitudinal study designs to build causal relationships on the therapeutic effects of cannabis use and the inclusion of reliable and valid symptom assessment measures over time, which facilitates developing clinical practice guidance and policymaking in cannabis nursing.

Patient or Public Contribution

No patient or public contribution.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Clinical Nursing

Development and validation of a nomogram for oral mucosal membrane pressure injuries in ICU patients: A prospective cohort study

Por: Lingli Jia · Yuchun Deng · Yu Xu · Xiaoli Wu · Dan Liu · Muying Li · Shijun Huang · Yaodan Zhang · Aiping Du · Huan Liu · Yongming Tian — Mayo 27th 2024 at 06:36

Abstract

Aims

Establishing a nomogram to estimate the probability of oral mucosal membrane pressure injury of endotracheal tube-intubated hospitalized patients in intensive care unit.

Design

Multicentre prospective cohort study.

Methods

Using Lasso regression and COX regression, variable selection was performed on demographic, clinical and laboratory data of 1037 ICU endotracheal tube-intubated hospitalized patients from West China Hospital, to construct a nomogram. External validation was conducted on 484 ICU endotracheal tube-intubated patients from People's Hospital of Zhongjiang County.

Results

Among 38 potential predictors, five variables emerged as independent predictors, integrated into the nomogram: administration of antibiotics, nutritional therapy duration, agitation, hypotension and albumin levels.

Conclusions

We established a nomogram based on the hospital characteristics of ICU endotracheal tube-intubated patients, aiding in the prediction of the occurrence of oral mucosal membrane pressure injury.

Reporting Method

The study followed TRIPOD guidelines.

Relevance to Clinical Practice

The nomogram we developed can assist clinical worker in better identifying at-risk patients and risk factors. It enables the implementation of evidence-based nursing interventions in care to prevent the development of oral mucosal membrane pressure injury.

Trial registration

The study has been registered with the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (http://www.chictr.org.cn) under registration number ChiCTR2200056615.

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