Relationship of Hemodialysis Shift With Sleep Quality and Depression in Hemodialysis Patients

This descriptive correlational study was aimed at determining the relationship of hemodialysis shift with sleep quality and depression in 310 hemodialysis patients. Demographic and Clinical Questionnaires, the Pittsburgh sleep quality index, and Beck’s Depression Inventory were used to ascertain the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical nursing research 2019-03, Vol.28 (3), p.356-373
Hauptverfasser: Norozi Firoz, Masomeh, Shafipour, Vida, Jafari, Hedayat, Hosseini, Seyed Hamzeh, Yazdani - Charati, Jamshid
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container_end_page 373
container_issue 3
container_start_page 356
container_title Clinical nursing research
container_volume 28
creator Norozi Firoz, Masomeh
Shafipour, Vida
Jafari, Hedayat
Hosseini, Seyed Hamzeh
Yazdani - Charati, Jamshid
description This descriptive correlational study was aimed at determining the relationship of hemodialysis shift with sleep quality and depression in 310 hemodialysis patients. Demographic and Clinical Questionnaires, the Pittsburgh sleep quality index, and Beck’s Depression Inventory were used to ascertain the aforementioned relationship. Among the patients, 59.6% reported poor sleep quality and 44.8% reported experiencing depression. Results show that these conditions were significantly related to many factors. Although dialysis shift was not significantly related to sleep quality and depression, sleep quality was found significantly associated with age, female gender, illiteracy, unemployment, residence in rural areas, diabetes, addiction to sedatives, and phosphorus levels. A significant relationship was also found between depression and phosphorus levels. Logistic regression predicted age, gender, illiteracy, unemployment, residence in rural areas, and addiction to sedatives as factors for poor sleep quality. A body mass index (BMI) above 30, decreased urea, and increased phosphorus were predicted as factors for increased depression.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Addictions
Anesthesia
Body mass index
Diabetes
Dialysis
Gender
Health risk assessment
Hemodialysis
Illiteracy
Mental depression
Nursing
Obesity
Patients
Phosphorus
Quality
Residence
Rural areas
Rural communities
Sedative drugs
Sleep
Sleep disorders
Socioeconomic factors
Unemployment
title Relationship of Hemodialysis Shift With Sleep Quality and Depression in Hemodialysis Patients
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