| Abstract |
Objective: To explore the effect of introducing high quality nursing service mode on treatment effect and prognosis of depression patients in the course of non-convulsive electroconvulsive therapy. Methods: 100 patients with depression treated by non-convulsive electroconvulsive therapy were randomly divided into two groups: control group (n=50), observation group (n=50), total effective rate, psychological status, compliance, satisfaction, nursing quality score and adverse cardiovascular events rate. Results: The total effective rate of depression patients in the observation group was higher than that in the control group (P < 0.05). Before the intervention, there was no difference in anxiety and depression scores between the two groups (P > 0.05); after the intervention, each score was lower than before, and the observation group was lower than the control group, the difference was statistically significant (P < 0.05). Before the intervention, there was no difference in the scores of each dimension of MARS scale between the two groups (P > 0.05); after the intervention, the scores were all increased, and the degree of increase in the observation group was more significant (P < 0.05). After intervention, the satisfaction score and nursing quality score of the observation group were higher than those of the control group, with statistical significance (P < 0.05). The incidence of cardiovascular adverse events in the observation group was lower than that in the control group. CONCLUSION: For depression patients treated with non-convulsive electroconvulsive therapy, the introduction of high-quality nursing service mode for intervention can enhance the therapeutic effect, alleviate anxiety and depression, improve treatment compliance, improve nursing satisfaction and nursing quality, and reduce the incidence of cardiovascular adverse events, which has very important development value.
|