6 results on '"Rafael, B"'
Search Results
2. [Health goals amongst patients with Crohn's disease.]
- Author
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Festő B, Njers S, Dávid A, Horvát B, Sallay V, Molnár T, Rafael B, and Martos T
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Adult, Male, Goals, Quality of Life, Crohn Disease therapy, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, Smoking Cessation
- Abstract
Introduction: Inflammatory bowel diseases, including Crohn's disease, have a significant impact on patients' lifestyle, requiring lifelong attention to health behavior., Objective: The aim of our study was to investigate health-related goals, emotions related to health goals, the use of infocommunication tools and their associations., Method: 79 patients with Crohn's disease (59.5% female, mean age 40.7 years, SD = 11.89) participated in the study. They answered demographic and health behaviour questions and completed the Personal Health Plans Questionnaire, which assessed their personal health goals, positive and negative emotions about health goal(s), support for personal health goals from their physician, negative and positive effects (barriers/support) of achieving health goals, and digital technology and internet use., Results: 70% of patients had at least 1 health goal. The health goals were classified into four categories: physical activity (43.6%), stress management (25.4%), nutrition (18%) and smoking cessation (7%). 71% of participants experienced at least average levels of positive emotions related to the health goal, but about 50% also experienced negative emotions. 51% of those with a health goal regularly use the internet and apps on smartphones. Infocommunication device use showed a medium-strength correlation with perceived health goal-related barrier/support (ρ = 0.55, p<0.01), support from the person's doctor (ρ = 0.45, p<0.05) and physical activity (ρ = 0.40, p<0.01)., Discussion: More than two-thirds of patients had a health goal; most of the goals were related to health behaviours that are also relevant to Crohn's disease, but few had healthy eating and smoking cessation as health goals. Half of those with a health goal regularly use the internet and apps on smartphones. Among health behaviours, physical activity was associated with infocommunication device use., Conclusion: It is recommended to investigate patients' health goals and infocommunication device use in the care of patients with Crohn's disease. This would allow the development of specific interventions to improve their health behaviour, which could increase the quality of life and disease prognosis. Orv Hetil. 2023; 164(28): 1102-1110.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Association of diabetes mellitus with depression, anxiety and quality of life
- Author
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Rafael B, Horváth L, Szemán F, Várkonyi T, Lengyel C, and Dávid A
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Depression epidemiology, Depression psychology, Anxiety epidemiology, Anxiety etiology, Anxiety psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Quality of Life psychology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 complications, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 epidemiology
- Abstract
"Introduction: Many studies demonstrated that psychological factors play an important role in the development and course of diabetes mellitus. Objective: The focus of our research, among the first in a Hungarian sample, was to examine depression and anxiety levels and diabetes-specific quality of life in people with type 2 diabetes, to explore gender differences, and to analyze the relationship of depression and anxiety with diabetes-specific quality of life. Method: 157 people diagnosed with type 2 diabetes (women: 58.6%, men: 40.1%) were assessed for levels of depression Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale – Hungarian version), anxiety (Spielberger’s Trait Anxiety Questionnaire) and diabetes-specific quality of life (Audit of Diabetes-Dependent Quality of Life – Hungarian version). Results: 65% of subjects did not show depressive symptoms, but 56.1% showed moderate trait anxiety. More severe depressive symptoms (U = 1625, p<0.001) and higher trait anxiety (U = 1556, p<0.001) were significantly more frequent in women compared to men. Depressive symptom severity and trait anxiety were inversely and weakly correlated with diabetes-specific quality of life. Discussion: In summary, the results suggest that the psychological state (depressive symptoms and anxiety) in patients with type 2 diabetes is associated with their diabetes-specific quality of life. Women with diabetes also have higher levels of depression and anxiety compared to men with diabetes. Conclusion: Psychological assessment of patients’ depressive and anxiety symptoms and quality of life is recommended in the care of diabetic patients, and appropriate treatment is recommended as needed. This may improve patients’ quality of life, therapeutic cooperation and disease prognosis."
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Influencing factors on depressive symptoms and suicidal ideation among inflammatory bowel disease patients: Multicenter study
- Author
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Sánta A, Szántó KJ, Miheller P, Sarlós P, Juhász A, Hamvas E, Szegedi-Hallgató E, Farkas K, Rafael B, and Molnár T
- Subjects
- Depression epidemiology, Humans, Risk Factors, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, Suicidal Ideation
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. [Correlation of social support and healthy lifestyle].
- Author
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Ocsovszky Z, Rafael B, Martos T, Csabai M, Bagyura Z, Sallay V, and Merkely B
- Subjects
- Humans, Healthy Lifestyle, Social Support
- Abstract
Introduction: Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death accounting for 4 million deaths per year in Europe. Psychosocial factors explain at least 25-40% of the disease's prevalence beyond the well-known lifestyle factors. Isolation in adulthood is one of the main sources of chronic stress that raises the incidence of the disease. The low level of social support and social isolation are increasing the risk of depression and high blood pressure hence the incidence of cardiovascular diseases. Aim: Our aim was to observe the correlation between social isolation and health behaviour. Furthermore, we have adapted the earlier validated Multidimensional Social Support Scale to the domain of health. Method: The data from 507 persons were collected online in 2018. Multidimensional Social Support Scale adapted to health, self-rated health, subjective means, short version of Beck Depression, shortened version of WHO Wellbeing, and Perceived Stress Scales were recorded. Results: Factor analysis verified the scale construction of the original 3-subscale structure (Cronbach alpha values = 0.945, 0.950 and 0.905). According to the regression models, social support received from friends we have observed to have moderately positive correlation with intensive exercises (B = 0.205, beta = 0.096, p = 0.093). Logistic regression model revealed that health-connected social support does not correlate with smoking, only education variable was related with it strongly, statistically significantly (B = -1.284, OR = 0.277, p<0.001). Conclusion: Multidimensional Social Support Scale has satisfactory stability and consistency to measure health-related social support. Social support showed correlation with the measures of mental health (depression, stress-level, wellbeing), and moderate association with intense exercises. Orv Hetil. 2020; 161(4): 129-138.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. [Anxiety, depression, health-related control beliefs, and their association with health behavior in patients with ischemic heart disease].
- Author
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Rafael B, Konkolÿ Thege B, Kovács P, and Balog P
- Subjects
- Anxiety epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression epidemiology, Exercise, Feeding Behavior, Female, Humans, Hungary epidemiology, Internal-External Control, Life Style, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Anxiety etiology, Cultural Characteristics, Depression etiology, Health Behavior, Health Status, Myocardial Ischemia psychology, Myocardial Ischemia rehabilitation
- Abstract
Introduction: Psychological and lifestyle factors affect the development and outcome of heart disease considerably., Aim: The aims of the authors were to examine health control, level of anxiety and depression and to analyse their relationship with health behaviour in patients with ischemic heart disease., Method: The present cross-sectional study involved 116 patients who took part in residential cardiac rehabilitation (56.9% men, mean age: 57.65±8.22 years)., Results: 30.9% of the patients reported elevated anxiety and 21.9% increased depressive symptomatology. Social-external control belief was the strongest among respondents. Further, anxiety and depression were negatively associated with healthy diet and the frequency of exercise. Patients with stronger social-external control beliefs were more likely to seek medical attention if they suspected a disease., Conclusions: It is important to assess psychological risk factors linked to cardiovascular diseases in cardiac rehabilitation departments and to initiate psychological interventions if indicated.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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