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ÃÖ¼Ò¿µ ( Choi So-Young ) - Ææ½Çº£´Ï¾Æ ÁÖ¸³´ëÇб³
°íÀϼ± ( Ko Il-Sun ) - ¿¬¼¼´ëÇб³ °£È£´ëÇÐ
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Abstract
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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to identify how self-care agency and social support influence self-care practices among spinal cord injured patients.
Methods: 106 spinal cord injured patients were recruited from April 12 to May 28, 2016. Structured questionnaires used were the Korean version of the Appraisal of the Self-Care Agency Scale Revised (ASAS-R), the Social Support Scale, and the Spinal Cord Injury Lifestyle Scale (SCILS). Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, t-test, one-way ANOVA, Pearson correlations, and Stepwise multiple regression analysis with the SPSS/WIN 23.0 program.
Results: Self-care practices had a significant association with self-care agency (¥â=.30, p=.002), social support (¥â=.24, p=.010), and monthly income (¥â=.18, p=.038). A total of 21.5% of the variance explained the self-care practice among spinal cord injured patients and was explained by self-care agency, social support, and monthly income. The self-care agency was the factor most influential on self-care practices among spinal cord injured patients explaining 15.4% of variance.
Conclusion: The result suggests that developing strategies enhance spinal cord injured patients¡¯ self-care agency and self-care practices.
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KeyWords
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ô¼ö¼Õ»ó, ÀÚ°¡°ü¸®, »çȸÀû ÁöÁö
Spinal cord injuries, Self care, Social support
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