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Showing 2 results for Jabalameli

Negar Akbari Zargar, Seyyed Seyed Abbas Haghayegh, Saeed Jahanian, Sheida Jabalameli,
Volume 10, Issue 1 (3-2021)
Abstract

Abstract
Aim. The aim of this study was to compare the effectiveness of acceptance-based therapy and emotion-based cognitive therapy on psychological well-being of patients with cardiac arrhythmia.
Background. The study of heart disease has long been noted by psychological factors because an individual with cardiac arrhythmias may suffer from mental well-being. 
Method. This was a quasi-experimental  study and to collect the data, a pre-test-post-test design with two experimental and one control group was used. The statistical population of the study consisted of all cardiac arrhythmia patients of Amirabad Heart Hospital in Tehran, out of which 60 people were selected by convenience sampling method and randomly divided into two experimental groups (20 people in each group) and one control group (20). The tools used in the present study included mental well-being (Reef, 1995), which were used in two stages of pre-test and post-test.
Findings. According to the findings, the mean score of psychological well-being in both experimental groups (acceptance-based therapy and emotion-based cognitive therapy) increased in the post-test stage compared to the pre-test, and these interventions increased the score of psychological well-being components in patients with heart arrhythmia compared to control group.
Conclusion. Clinicians can use these interventions (acceptance-based therapy and emotion-based cognitive therapy) in patients with cardiac arrhythmias to promote psychological well-being and recovery.
Soheila Salmanian, Sheida Jabalameli, Maryam Moghimian, Fariba Arjmandi,
Volume 10, Issue 1 (3-2021)
Abstract

Abstract
Aim. This study was conducted to examine the effect of mentalization-based therapy and emotion-regulated therapy based on the Gross process model on psychological well-being and quality of work-life of nurses in intensive care units.
Background. Improving nurses' well-being and satisfaction with their quality of work-life improves the nurse-patient relationship and hospitals' performance from an organizational point of view. It is necessary to provide psychological therapeutic interventions to this crucial group of health care providers.
Method. This study was an experimental  study (pre-test post-test with control group) in which 45 nurses working in intensive care units of selected Tehran hospitals, Iran, were selected by the convenience sampling method, and assigned to two intervention groups and one control group (15 nurses in each group). Reef's short-term psychological well-being and Walton's 32-item quality of work-life were used to measure dependent variables of the study. Then, mentalization-based therapy group received intervention in 8 sessions of 90 minutes as one session per week; and the treatment group based on emotion regulated therapy based on the Gross process model received the intervention in 8 sessions of 90 minutes, one session per week based on the protocol. No intervention was implemented for the control group. Data were analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics in SPSS software.
Findings. Before the intervention, there were the highest scores for quality of work-life in the control group. At the end of the study and after the intervention, the scores of quality of work-life increased in all three groups, and no statistical significant difference was found between the groups. Before the intervention, the highest scores for psychological well-being was observed in the mentalization-based therapy group. (85.86±6.56), and after the intervention, although the psychological well-being scores of both interventions groups were higher than that of control group, but this diferrence was not statistically significant.
Conclusion. Based on the findings of this study, it seems that training sessions of mentalization-based therapy and emotion-regulated therapy based on the Gross process model improve the quality of work-life in nurses working in intensive care units, but the improvement was not statistically significant.


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فصلنامه پرستاری قلب و عروق Iranian Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing
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