The majority of patients (60-70%) develop high levels of anxiety before surgery. Surgical patients may experience feelings of anxiety due to insufficient information and counseling before surgery and potential changes in the body caused by surgery. Fears include (but are not limited to) not waking up from anesthesia, not being able to return to previous work and family life, and adaptation concerns regarding new processes after surgery. Patients with fear of complications experience preoperative anxiety four times more than other patients. Other factors affecting preoperative anxiety were determined to be waiting for a long time before surgery, not knowing what will happen during surgery, losing control of the body, not receiving sufficient social support, being exposed to medical errors, and encountering undesirable health outcomes after surgery. The changes that will occur in the body and lifestyle after stoma surgery scare patients and cause them to feel anxiety in the pre-operative period. Despite significant developments in stoma care products and the increase in the number of nurses specialized in stoma care in recent years, the majority of patients experience problems with compliance. For this reason, the compliance of stoma patients with stoma life is increasingly the subject of clinical trials and epidemiological studies. In our country, studies conducted to determine the problems experienced by stoma individuals regarding compliance with stoma and social life are limited. Nursing interventions are recommended to reduce patients' anxiety and increase their compliance with stoma after surgery. This study aims to evaluate the effect of stoma simulation performed preoperative surgery on the patient's anxiety level and postoperative stoma compliance.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
58
Patients who will undergo stoma surgery will have an intervention one day before the surgery. The adapter will be cut to an estimated stoma size, heated by rubbing with hands and adapted to the skin by applying stoma paste. The patient will be asked to place their hand on the adapter and apply pressure. Then, the stoma bag filled with tissues and water and the adapter will be combined. The patient will be informed that they should not hesitate to do any activity that they will spend 24 hours with the stoma bag. The patient will be provided with the opportunity to go to the toilet, eat, sleep and experience all their daily activities with the stoma. It allows patients to experience the stoma bag by putting it on 24 hours before the surgery. In this way, patients know that they will not encounter any surprises after the surgery.
Istanbul University Istanbul Medical Faculty Hospital
Istanbul, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGAnxiety
The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory consists of two separate dimensions: state anxiety (STAI-I) and trait anxiety (STAI-II), and these dimensions aim to measure individuals' anxiety states in different contexts. The scale consists of 40 items in total; 20 items measure state anxiety and the other 20 items measure trait anxiety. Both scales are scored between 20-80, and as the score increases, the level of anxiety increases. The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory is administered 24 hours before surgery. The patient's state anxiety is measured 30 minutes before surgery.
Time frame: 24 hours before surgery and 30 minutes before surgery
Stoma adaptation
The patient's adaptation to the stoma is assessed with the Ostomy Adjustment Inventory. The scale consists of 23 items and four sub-dimensions. The sub-dimensions are acceptance, anger, anxiety/worry, and social adaptation. The lowest score on the scale is 0, and the highest is 92. A high score on the scale indicates that the individual's adaptation to the stoma is high.
Time frame: the morning of the patient's discharge (7th day of surgery) and 1 months after surgery
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