已发表论文

中国癫痫青少年在过渡准备阶段的行为困境和自我管理支持需求:一项混合方法研究

 

Authors Cui C, Zhou H, Chen W, Li S, Zheng X

Received 18 August 2023

Accepted for publication 17 October 2023

Published 25 October 2023 Volume 2023:17 Pages 2605—2619

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S429890

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Professor Qizhi (Cathy) Yao

Objective: The study aimed to describe and explore the behavioral dilemmas and support-requirement characteristics of self-management for epileptic adolescents during transition readiness.
Methods: A convergent mixed-methods study was conducted. Patients (N=654) in eight hospitals in China completed a demographic and disease characteristics questionnaire and measures of epilepsy transition readiness, self-management of epilepsy, and perceived social support, and 17 patients and family care-givers were interviewed simultaneously.
Results: Adolescents with epilepsy (AWEs) had low levels of self-management and transition readiness, and moderate levels of social support. Multivariate linear regression showed that age, antiepileptic drug type, comorbidities, family structure, transition readiness, and social support were statistically significant in the regression model (p< 0.05). Seven themes emerged in the qualitative analysis related to self-management behavioral dilemmas, and 11 themes emerged for support requirements. The findings from the qualitative and quantitative analyses were combined to create a conceptual model based on the SMART framework and the social cognitive theory.
Conclusion: The findings indicate that the state of self-management behaviors of Chinese AWEs is not promising. The influential factors and characteristics are complex and systematic.
Practice Implications: This study provides insights into the self-management practices of AWEs in China and expands previous self-management and transitional readiness strategies and models.
Keywords: convergent mixed-methods, adolescence, self-management of chronic diseases, epilepsy