Higher levels of self-efficacy are significantly and positively correlated with better quality of life across physical, psychological, social, and environmental domains in patients with coronary heart disease.
Cross-Sectional (n=100)
No
Is self-efficacy associated with quality of life in patients with coronary heart disease?
Higher self-efficacy is positively correlated with better physical, psychological, social, and environmental quality of life in patients with coronary heart disease.
Effect estimate: r = 0.209 to 0.477
p-value: p=< 0.05
Coronary heart disease had an impact on functional status and quality of life. Self-Efficacy was needed in self-care management in coronary heart disease patients. The main obective of this study was to identify the relationship between self-efficacy and quality of life in coronary heart disease patients. This study was conducted using a cross-sectional design and the samples were 100 patients with coronary heart disease recruited through consecutive sampling from Regional General Hospital Cardiology, Jambi Province The instruments used included The self-efficacy for managing chronic diseases 6-item scale (SEMCD-6) and The World Health Organization Quality of Life Brief Version (WHOQOL-Bref), while the data analysis was performed using Spearman correlation. The results showed there was a positive correlation between self-efficacy and the four domains of quality of life (physical, psychological, social relations, and environmental domains ( p-value < 0.05). It was hoped that nurses could increase patient self-efficacy by providing motivation and education for both patients and family to improve the patient's quality of life.Keywords: Self-Efficacy; Quality of Life; Coronary Heart Disease
Oktarina et al. (Sat,) conducted a cross-sectional in Coronary heart disease (n=100). Self-efficacy was evaluated on Correlation between self-efficacy and quality of life domains (r = 0.209 to 0.477, p=< 0.05). Higher levels of self-efficacy are significantly and positively correlated with better quality of life across physical, psychological, social, and environmental domains in patients with coronary heart disease.
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