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This study's general objective was to evaluate the efficacy of nursing orientation to reduce the anxiety of patients with acute coronary syndrome undergoing bed bath. The specific objectives included: the development and validation of an informative manual concerning bed bath; correlation of physiological variables (systolic and diastolic blood pressure and heart and respiratory rate) with the patients' state anxiety; correlation of antecedent variables (age, gender, cardiovascular risk factor, use of beta blockers, trait anxiety, depression, prior hospitalization, prior experience with bed baths, the patients' preference for a female or male professional to perform the bath, pain, fear, and embarrassment) with the patients' state anxiety.
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Patients with acute coronary syndrome present many physiological and psychological changes, especially anxiety, which can be more intense when the patient expects or experiences certain procedures, such as bed bath. The association of anxiety and acute myocardial infarction has shown negative impact on the prognosis of these patients. The anxiety causes activation of the sympathetic nervous system by increasing cardiac contractility, blood pressure, heart rate and oxygen consumption, worsening disease progression. Thus, minimizing the effects of patients' anxiety in the face of various nursing procedures is essential to quality care. The anxiety can be reduced using medications and/or nursing orientation.
This study was conducted in the Coronary Care Units, Brazilian Heart Institute. The study was divided into two phases. The first comprised the development and validation of an informative manual by nurses and patients. The manual was developed by the researchers and then submitted to validation by five nursing professors from the field of nursing fundamentals and five nurses with experience in coronary care units. The Delphi Technique was used to validate the manual in this phase. After validation by nurses, the manual was validated by 35 patients hospitalized in the coronary care unit who experienced bed bath at least once. A score above 4 should be achieved for the manual to be considered comprehensible and validated by patients. The statistical analysis at this phase was performed through the Wilcoxon rank-sum test and percentage of score 5 with its confidence interval. The study's second phase comprised assessment of the efficacy of nursing orientation to reduce the anxiety of patients with acute coronary syndrome undergoing bed baths. The sample population was composed of 120 patients with acute coronary syndrome hospitalized in coronary care units divided into two groups: control group (patients who did not read the informative manual concerning bed bath and received only the unit's routine information) and the intervention group (patients who received nursing orientation and read the informative manual concerning bed bath). The STAI-state was used to assess anxiety. It was applied immediately after informing the patients about the bed bath, immediately after orientation (intervention group) or immediately after the unit's routine information (control group), and immediately after the bath.
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120 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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