Home|Journals Follow on Twitter| Subscribe to List

Directory for Medical Articles
 

Open Access

Original Research



Evaluation of mental health using hospital anxiety and depression scale in primary caregivers of patients undergoing dialysis

Akshay Prashanth Giri, Subhashini Mohanasundaram, P C Kesavankutty Nayar, R N Sharma, George Kurian.

Abstract
Background: There is inadequate research on anxiety and depression in the primary caregivers of the patients undergoing dialysis.

Objective: To analyze the anxiety and depression of primary caregivers of patients undergoing dialysis using Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS).

Materials and Methods: This study enrolled 52 patients from Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences Hospital, Kochi, Kerala, India. Their mental health was assessed by using HADS. The patient’s caregivers were categorized into three groups based on their age namely 60 years. The caregiver’s characteristics such as relationship, educational status, type of family, income status, frequency of dialysis, number of hospitalization per year, and monthly expenditure for dialysis were taken into consideration.

Result: The total number of caregivers enrolled in this study was 52 (men: 18, women: 34). The overall HADS indicated that both anxiety and depression were mildly higher than the normal. However, the gender-based analyses showed that women caregivers were moderately depressed and mildly anxious that too middle-aged female caregivers were affected with both, whereas in men the young male caregivers were in mild depression. In the remaining male groups, no significant depression and anxiety were noted.

Conclusion: The middle-aged women caregivers (41–59 years) were mildly depressed and anxious when compared with other groups.

Key words: HADS, caregivers, depression, anxiety, dialysis


Full text links

Share this Article




ScopeMed Home
Follow ScopeMed on Twitter
Article Tools
Job Opportunities/Service Offers
eJPort Journal Hosting
About ScopeMed
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Suggest a Journal
Publisher Login
Contact Us

The articles in Scopemed are open access articles licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the work is properly cited.
ScopeMed is a Database Service for Scientific Publications. Copyright © ScopeMed® Information Services.
Scopemed Buttons