Background: Burn injuries are a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, affecting not only the patients but also their families. Family-based education and follow-up program are interventions that aim to improve the quality of life and psychosocial outcomes of patients with burns and their families. However, we find a lack of evidence on the effectiveness and feasibility of these programs in different settings and populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: As burn self-stigma has not been addressed fully, the purpose of current study is to analyze dimensions of the concept using literature and lived experiences in burn survivors.
Methods: Using hybrid concept analysis method, we investigated self-stigma in three phases (i.e.
Background: Reintegrating to society is a significant challenge during burn survivors' rehabilitation.
Aim: This study aims to describe what Iranian female survivors from unintentional severe burns experience as enablers and barriers of social reintegration (SR).
Methods: Fourteen adult female burn survivors whose burns were unintentional participated in this qualitative study.
Background: Healthcare providers involved in an unexpected adverse patient safety event are affected by negative outcomes of the event and are called 'second victims'. The Second Victim Experience and Support Tool has been introduced as a reliable and valid measure to assess the second victim responses and to support recourses of healthcare professionals.
Aim: The core objective of this survey was to assess the psychometric attributes of the scale within Iranian nurse.
Aim: The study examined the mediating effect of the second victim experience between safety culture and burnout in Iranian nurses.
Methods: A convenience sample of 298 nurses from five teaching hospitals of Urmia participated in the study. Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture, Maslach Burnout Inventory and The Second Victim Experience and Support Tool were used to measure the major variables.
Aim: Present review aimed to conduct a comprehensive review of the effectiveness of non-pharmacological interventions (NPIs) on reducing anxiety in adult burn patients.
Method: We searched PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, Cochrane Library, and Google Scholar databases through September 2019 for randomized clinical trials comparing NPIs to a control group. The primary outcomes were general anxiety and pain anxiety.
Background: Social support and spirituality are important issues among burn survivors that appear to affect their posttraumatic growth (PTG).
Aim: To investigate the relationship between social support and PTG in Iranian burn survivors, as mediated by their perceptions of spiritual well-being.
Method: This is a correlation study with a cross-sectional design, and it uses anonymous questionnaires as study instruments (i.
Background: Moral distress and workplace bullying are important issues in the nursing workplace that appear to affect nurse's burnout.
Aim: To investigate the relationship between moral distress and burnout in Iranian nurses, as mediated by their perceptions of workplace bullying.
Ethical Considerations: The research was approved by the committee of ethics in research of the Urmia University of Medical Sciences.
Introduction: Psychosocial outcomes of burn survivors in the first year of rehabilitation are not well studied. Considering the interrelationships among psychosocial processes in burn survivors, we assessed three psychosocial variables (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: 'Background pain' and 'pain anxiety' are among the numerous problems of patients with burns. Non-pharmacological and pharmacological interventions have been used to reduce background pain and pain anxiety. This study compared the effectiveness of hypnosis and 'neutral hypnosis' (as a placebo in the control group) in decreasing the background burn pain and pain anxiety of adult male survivors with burns.
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