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Original Articles

Resilience and its correlates among first ischemic stroke survivors at acute stage of hospitalization from a tertiary hospital in China:a cross-sectional study

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Pages 828-836 | Received 10 Jul 2018, Accepted 13 Nov 2018, Published online: 31 Dec 2018
 

Abstract

Objectives: To measure the resilience of elderly patients with first ischemic stroke in mainland China and to identify variables that may be correlated with resilience at the acute stage of hospitalization.

Methods: A cross-sectional survey was carried out in departments of neurology of two tertiary hospitals, where a convenience sample of one hundred and forty-seven elderly patients with first ischemic stroke voluntarily participated in our study. Resilience was assessed using the Chinese version of Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale with three dimensions (tenacity, strength, and optimism). The General Self-Efficacy Scale and Medical Coping Modes Questionnaire were applied to evaluate the respondents’ general self-efficacy and coping style. Functional independency was also measured using the Functional Independency Measure.

Results: The mean score of the 147 respondents’ resilience was 62.51 ± 14.69. Together, general self-efficacy, resignation, confrontation, per capital monthly income, and being main source of family income explained 68.1% of the variance in resilience. General self-efficacy, resignation, and confrontation were the strongest explanatory factors. Specifically, 63.4% of the variance in tenacity was explained for general self-efficacy, resignation, being main source of family income, surgical history, and per capital monthly income. 63.2% of the variance in strength was ascribed to general self-efficacy, resignation, per capital monthly income and avoidance. 32.5% of the variance in optimism was attributed to general self-efficacy, religion, and resignation.

Conclusion: General self-efficacy and coping style may be implied orientation in enhancing resilience of elderly patients with first ischemic stroke at acute hospitalization. Moreover, economic status may predict level of resilience.

    Highlights

  1. Resilience was measured in 147 older first-episode ischemic stroke survivors at acute hospitalization.

  2. General-efficacy was the strongest predictor of resilience.

  3. Resilience was significantly influenced by resignation.

  4. Coping strategy should be emphasized early after stroke.

Acknowledgements

We acknowledge the collaboration of the staff at the tertiary hospital from which we recruited our sample. We would like to thank all the participants.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Funding

This work was supported by the Shanghai Science and Technology Committee under Grant [16XD1403200] and [16YF1414700].

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