Factors influencing self-care in outpatients with external fixation in China

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Abstract

Objective: This study was performed to investigate factors influencing self-care agency in outpatients with external fixation support. Methods: Using a cross-sectional study approach, 110 outpatients with external fixation from a single Chinese hospital were evaluated from May 2018 to October 2018. Consecutive sampling was performed, and variables included demographic data, health knowledge regarding external fixation, and self-care skills. Open and closed survey questions were used. Results: The mean self-care agency score was 101.70 ± 20.14, with 36 (35.3%) outpatients scoring high. Demographic variables did not significantly influence the self-care level. However, health knowledge was significantly correlated with self-care skills, indicating that knowledgeable outpatients were more likely to be better at self-care. Conclusions: Outpatients with external fixation support need higher levels of health knowledge. The level of self-care agency in the present study was in the moderate range. Outpatients with external fixation support with higher health knowledge are more likely to have higher self-care skills.

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Xing, J., Sun, N., Li, L., Lv, D., Geng, S., & Li, Y. (2020). Factors influencing self-care in outpatients with external fixation in China. Journal of International Medical Research, 48(2). https://doi.org/10.1177/0300060520902603

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