1. Attitudes towards transplantation and medication among 121 heart, lung, liver and kidney recipients and their spouses
- Author
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Beat Muellhaupt, Lutz Goetzmann, Urte Scholz, R P Wüthrich, Michaela Roellin, Annette Boehler, Georg Noll, Rafaela Dux, Richard Klaghofer, University of Zurich, and Goetzmann, Lutz
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sense of Coherence ,610 Medicine & health ,organ transplant ,sense of coherence ,2700 General Medicine ,Burnout ,Anxiety ,Organ transplantation ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,ddc:150 ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Adaptation, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,10035 Clinic for Nephrology ,Spouses ,caregiver ,Aged ,Analysis of Variance ,Transplantation ,attitudes ,business.industry ,quality of partnership ,General Medicine ,Organ Transplantation ,Middle Aged ,spouse ,surgical procedures, operative ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,10057 Klinik für Konsiliarpsychiatrie und Psychosomatik ,quality of life ,Spouse ,Quality of Life ,10209 Clinic for Cardiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychosocial ,Attitude to Health ,Sense of coherence ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Summary QUESTIONS UNDER STUDY: A transplant represents a decisive event for patients and their caregivers. This article deals with the attitudes patients and their spouses have towards the transplantation. METHODS: In a cross-sectional study, 121 patients and their spouses were surveyed by questionnaire after a heart, lung, liver or kidney transplant. Attitudes were assessed by means of semantic differentials. Based on the results, an ‘Attitudes towards Transplantation’ Scale was developed. Sense of coherence (SOC-13), quality of life (Sf-36), quality of the relationship (RAS), burnout (BM) and the patient’s emotional response to the transplant (TxEQ-D) were additional psychosocial variables measured in order to assess the association between the attitudes and psychosocial characteristics of transplant patients and their spouses. RESULTS: The majority of patients and their spouses reported positive attitudes towards the transplant, including the attitudes towards medication, their perceived self and fate of being a transplant patient or spouse. Patients and spouses, however, had a negative attitude towards the transplantation in terms of stress and anxiety. Patients reported greater emotional stress from the transplant and rated their post-transplant perceived fate more negatively than their spouses. Attitudes towards the transplant were significantly associated with the sense of coherence and the quality of relationship. CONCLUSION: The attitudes of patients and spouses to different aspects of the transplant itself and to being a transplant patient or spouse should be deliberately reconsidered and facilitated in the psychosocial counselling with regard to the comprehensibility, manageability and meaningfulness of the transplant experience as well as to potential conflicts in the partnership.
- Published
- 2012
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