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Àü¼Ò¿¬ ( Jun So-Yeun ) - °µ¿°æÈñ´ëÇб³º´¿ø
°íÀϼ± ( Ko Il-Sun ) - ¿¬¼¼´ëÇб³ °£È£´ëÇÐ
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Abstract
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Purpose: This was a correlation study to identify the relationship of spiritual well-being, hope on fatigue in cancer patients on chemotherapy.
Methods: The subjects completed structured questionnaires: the ¡®Spiritual Well-being Scale", developed by Paloutzian & Ellison, "Hope Scale", developed by Kim & Lee and "Fatigue Scale", developed by Mendoza et al. Data were collected from 120 patientsat two general hospitals and were analyzed using t-test, ANOVA & Sheffe"s test, Pearson¡¯s correlation coefficients and multiple stepwise regression.
Results: Participants with higher fatigue had lower scores for hope (r=-.36, p<.001) and lower scores for spiritual well-being (r=-.23, p = .011). Participants with higher scores for hope had higher scores for spiritual well-being (r=.61, p<.001). The factors seen as contributing to fatigue were hope, financial burden of treatment, period of religious life, living with spouse, and reported pain. These variables explained 32.3% of the variance in fatigue. Hope with 13% was the most influential.
Conclusion: The fatigue of the cancer patients on chemotherapy can be reduced if hope is improved, and hope can be improved if the spiritual well-being is improved. Therefore, we suggest developing a nursing intervention program that leads to improve hope and spiritual well-being of the cancer patients on chemotherapy for reducing fatigue.
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KeyWords
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Á¾¾ç, Ç×¾ÏÈÇпä¹ý, ¿µÀû ¾È³ç, ÇÇ·Î
Neoplasm, Chemotherapy, Spirituality, Hope, Fatigue
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µîÀçÀú³Î Á¤º¸
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