WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14627/6
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Article Examination of the Relationship Between Mothers' Self-Confidence and Maternal Attachment in the Postpartum Period(Springer Publishing Co, 2025) Kilic, Melek; Yilmaz, Tulay; Kaya, Husniye Dinc; Gunaydin, Sevil; Dinç Kaya, HüsniyeOBJECTIVE: The relationship between self-confidence and maternal attachment during the postpartum period is critical to both the infant's healthy development and the mother's psychosocial adjustment. This study aimed to evaluate the association between mothers' self-confidence levels and maternal attachment during the postpartum period. METHOD: The study employed a descriptive and correlational design. A purposive sampling method was used in the study, and 147 mothers who were between 1 and 4 months postpartum, over the age of 18 years, able to communicate in Turkish and competent to fill out an online survey were included in the study. The data collection tools included the Descriptive Information Form, the Karitane Parenting Confidence Scale (KPCS), and the Maternal Attachment Inventory (MAI). The collected data were processed and analyzed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences for Windows, version 24.0. RESULTS: The participants' mean total KPCS score was 35.95 +/- 4.39, and the mean MAI score was 92.71 +/- 5.34. No statistically significant association was found between maternal attachment and parental confidence levels (p > .05). Additionally, no significant differences were observed between participants' sociodemographic characteristics and their scale scores (p > .05). CONCLUSIONS: The findings suggest that maternal confidence and attachment, although both essential components of postpartum adjustment, function as independent constructs influenced by different psychological and contextual mechanisms. Understanding these dimensions separately may provide insights for developing targeted interventions to support mothers in the early postpartum period.Article Development and Psychometric Properties of the Self-Efficacy Scale for Symptom Management and Self-Care in Patients with Cardiac Surgery(Springer Publishing Co, 2025) Aksut, Rabia Saglam; Capik, Canturk; Elmas, Tugce BozkurtBackground and Purpose: Evaluating self-efficacy for symptom management and self-care is crucial for ensuring follow-up care after cardiac surgery. As there is not yet a validated measurement tool for this evaluation, the aim of this study was to develop the Self-Efficacy Scale for Symptom Management and Self-Care (SESMSC: Cardiac Surgery) in patients with cardiac surgery and to examine its psychometric properties. Methods: The Symptom Management Theory and Bandura's Self-Efficacy Theory were used as the theoretical background for scale development. A multiphase design was utilized. The initial development phase consisted of item generation and expert panel review. The second phase comprised a three-step validation process: (a) face and content analysis (CFA) for construct validity, and (c) Cronbach's alpha, test-retest, and item- total correlation analysis to assess internal consistency reliability. The sample (n = 401) was randomly divided into two subsamples for EFA and CFA (EFA group: n = 201; CFA group: n = 200). Results: EFA suggested a 20-item, two-factor structure with factor loadings of .342-.782. The two subscales of the scale were labeled symptom management self-efficacy and self-efficacy for ch's alpha, test-retest, and item-total correlation results demonstrated acceptable internal consistency reliability. Implications for Practice: The SESMSC: Cardiac Surgery may be a useful tool to evaluate self-efficacy for symptom management and self-care after cardiac surgery. Further evaluation in independent samples is needed to investigate its psychometric properties and usefulness in clinical practice.
