Adjustment problems of spouses of patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery during early convalescence.

1988 
: Our purpose was to assess the social adjustment of spouses of patients who had undergone coronary artery bypass surgery during the patients' early convalescence. Specifically the study focused on social support and social activities, affective responses, and financial, marital, and sexual difficulties. Following an exploratory descriptive design, we conducted a semistructured interview using Benson's (1984) Social Adjustment Scale. A sample of 26 spouses were interviewed in a cardiology clinic 4 to 10 weeks after their mate's bypass surgery. Associations between demographic characteristics and the level of adjustment were determined by chi-square (adjusted for continuity) analysis. Nineteen spouses reported a high level of vigilance, with 13 reporting that this was a change since their mate's surgery. Ten spouses reported their economic level to be highly inadequate, and all of those stated that their economic situation had changed since surgery. A small number of subjects rated their mate as being dependent on them, and they had feelings of anxiety, fear, and depression. All of those subjects described this as a change since surgery. The majority of subjects had a low level of marital friction and a high level of communication with their spouse. Those married 30 years or longer were generally those satisfied with their level of social support.
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