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Factors Influencing Fatigue in Pregnant Women

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KMID : 0892720120160010080
±è¿µÈñ ( Kim Young-Hee ) - Çýõ´ëÇÐ °£È£°ú

Á¶¿ÁÈñ ( Cho Ok-Hee ) - Á¦ÁÖ´ëÇб³ °£È£´ëÇÐ

Abstract

Objectives: This study examined the factors influencing fatigue during pregnancy.

Methods: This was a cross sectional descriptive study on 89 pregnant women who visited a community health center. We collected data during the period between May and August in 2010. The instruments used in this study were demographic data, multidimensional assessment of fatigue (MAF) scale, Edinburg Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), Brief Encounter Pschychosocial (BEPSI-K) scale, marital satisfaction scale, and the visual analogue sleep satisfaction scale. The MAF scale indicated fatigue, which was considered serious if the score was high. The EPDS scale indicated depression, which was considered serious if the score was high. The BEPSI-K scale indicated the stress level, which showed a high score if the stress was seriously high.

Results: There was a significant difference in the fatigue among pregnant women of ages, jobs, and gestational durations. Fatigue was positively correlated with depression and stress and negatively correlated with marital satisfaction and sleep satisfaction. The factors significantly associated with fatigue in the regression model were sleep satisfaction, stress, and gestational duration.

Conclusion: Fatigue was a common complaint among women during pregnancy. It is important that nurses recognize fatigue as a real problem during pregnancy and develop strategies to cope with fatigue.
KeyWords

pregnant women, fatigue, sleep deprivation
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