Author/Authors :
Akbari Kamrani, Ahmad Ali Gerontology Department - Research Center on Aging - University of SocialWelfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, IR Iran , Foroughan, Mahshid Gerontology Department - Research Center on Aging - University of SocialWelfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, IR Iran , Yazdani Charati, Jamshid Biostatistics Department - Faculty of Health - Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari, Mazandaran, IR Iran , Taraghi, Zohreh Geriatric Nursing Department - Nursing and Midwifery Faculty - Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari, Mazandaran, IR Iran
Abstract :
Background: Heart failure has been recognized as a major cause of hospitalization, morbidity, and increasing healthcare costs. The
purpose of this study was to determine causal relationships between the factors predicting self-care in Iranian elders with chronic
heart failure.
Methods: In the present study, 334 elderly people (194 females and 140 males), with chronic heart failure (CHF), completed questionnaires
that covered the areas of psychosocial characteristics including; age, gender, education, income, location, living arrangement,
depression, social support, age-related characteristics including cognition, attitudes toward aging, functional status, hearing
impairment, visual impairment, poly-pharmacy, Charlson comorbidity index, clinical characteristics including; sodium serum
level, systolic BP, ejection fraction, severity of disease, sleep disorders, prior experiences, and self-care behaviors. The relationships
between variables were tested under the SEM technique using AMOS version 20.
Results: The collected data was found to not fit with the initial model, however, after modification, the final model fitness was
confirmed. Age-related characteristics had no effect on self-care behaviors (r = -0.3; P = 0.221). Social factors had both direct and
indirect negative effects on self-care (r = -0.37; P = 0.016) through age-related factors (r = -0.19; P = 0.016). Prior experiences had a
direct positive effect on self-care (r = 0.23; P = 0.018).
Conclusions: Developing programs to improve social conditions and designing the educational model based on older adults’ preferences
seems necessary.