Nursing Open (Jul 2023)

Relationship between perceptions of recurrence risk and depression state among first‐episode ischemic stroke patients in rural areas: The mediating role of coping style

  • Xueting Liu,
  • Zhenxiang Zhang,
  • Beilei Lin,
  • Yunfei Guo,
  • Yongxia Mei,
  • Zhiguang Ping,
  • Wenna Wang,
  • Hu Jiang,
  • Shaoyang Wang,
  • Chunhui Zhang,
  • Suyan Chen,
  • Qiushi Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.1695
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
pp. 4515 – 4525

Abstract

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Abstract Aims To investigate the relationship between stroke survivors' perceptions of recurrence risk, coping styles and depression state, and the role coping styles play in mediating that relationship. Design A cross‐sectional descriptive study. Methods From one hospital in Huaxian, China, 320 stroke survivors were randomly selected as a convenience sample. In this research, the Simplified Coping Style Questionnaire, the Patient Health Questionnaire‐9 and the Stroke Recurrence Risk Perception Scale were all used. Structural equation modelling and correlation analysis were used to analyse the data. This research followed the EQUATOR and STROBE checklists. Results There were 278 valid survey responses. There were mild to severe depressive symptoms in 84.8% of stroke survivors. In stroke survivors, there was a significant negative relationship (p < 0.01) between the positive coping of perceptions of recurrence risk and their depression state. Recurrence risk perception's impact on depression state was partly mediated, according to mediation studies, by coping style, with the mediation effect accounting for 44.92% of the overall effect. Conclusions The connection between perceptions of recurrence risk and depression state was mediated by the coping mechanisms of stroke survivors. A lower degree of depression state among survivors was connected with positive coping to the beliefs of recurrence risk.

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