Application of Structural Psychological Intervention and Ethical Emotional Support in Unmarried Ectopic Pregnancy Patients with Unilateral Salpingectomy
Objective:To explore the effect of structural psychological intervention and ethical emotional support in unmarried ectopic pregnancy(EP)patients with unilateral salpingectomy.Method:A total of 86 unmarried EP patients who underwent unilateral salpingectomy in Liangzhou District Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine Hospital from August 2022 to July 2023 were selected as the study subjects and were randomly divided into the intervention group and the control group,with 43 cases in each group.The control group was given routine psychological intervention,and the intervention group was given structural psychological intervention combined with ethical emotional support.Perioperative indexes,disease uncertainty,psychological resilience and post-traumatic growth were compared between the two groups.Result:The time of first eating,first exhaust,first defecation and hospitalization in the intervention group were shorter than those in the control group,and the difference was statistically significant(P<0.05).When out of hospital,the Chinese version of Mishel Disease Uncertainty Scale(C-MUIS)score decreased between the two groups,and the intervention group was lower than the control group,the difference was statistically significant(P<0.05).When out of hospital,the score of Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale(CD-RISC)was higher in the two groups,and the difference was statistically significant(P<0.05).The score of Posttraumatic Growth Rating Scale(PTGI)was higher in the intervention group than in the control group,the difference was statistically significant(P<0.05).Conclusion:The application of structural psychological intervention and ethical emotional support in unmarried EP patients with unilateral salpingectomy can improve perioperative indicators,reduce disease uncertainty,and enhance psychological resilience and post-traumatic growth levels.
Ectopic pregnancyUnilateral salpingectomyStructural psychologyEthical emotional support