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Purpose: This study aimed to investigate the relationship between mental health, perceived social support, and death anxiety, and the predictive roles of mental health and perceived social support in the explanation of death anxiety in a sample of adults with chronic kidney disease. Methods: A demographic questionnaire, the Symptom Check List-25, the Social Support Survey Scale, and the Death Anxiety Scale (DAS) were used in the present study. The sample consisted of 58 adult patients with chronic kidney failure. Results: Findings showed that mental health had significantly positive relationships to the total score of the death anxiety and the fear of death, the fear of pain and disease, and the death thoughts subscales of the DAS. Social support had a significant negative relationship to the total score of the death anxiety and the fear of pain and disease, the death thoughts, and the transient time and the short life subscales of the DAS. Mental health and combined mental health and social support explained 14% and 21% of death anxiety variation in patients with chronic kidney failure, respectively. Conclusion: Mental health and social support constructs can relatively predict the variations of death anxiety in patients with chronic kidney failure. Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

Citation

Siamak Khodarahimi, Hassan Ali Veiskarami, Nasrollah Mazraeh, Sonay Sheikhi, Mojtaba Rahimian Bougar. Mental Health, Social Support, and Death Anxiety in Patients With Chronic Kidney Failure. The Journal of nervous and mental disease. 2021 Nov 01;209(11):809-813

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PMID: 34238892

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