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Preliminary analysis of self-efficacy, self-compassion, and compa | 46595
Pediatrics & Therapeutics

Pediatrics & Therapeutics
Open Access

ISSN: 2161-0665

+44 1478 350008

Preliminary analysis of self-efficacy, self-compassion, & compassion for others


Joint Event on Pediatrics, Nutrition & Primary Healthcare Nursing

July 16-18, 2018 Dubai, UAE

Dale Hilty

Mt. Carmel College of Nursing, USA

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Pediatr Ther

Abstract :

Researchers have used self-efficacy to investigate online learning, physical therapist, diabetes type 2, work engagement, teacher education, exercise behavior, chemotherapy treatment, Alzheimer disease, counseling, clinical reasoning, and online shopping. Instrumentation used was self-efficacy, compassion scale, and self-compassion scale. Scale measures compassion toward others. Subscales are: kindness, judgment, common humanity, isolation, mindfulness, and disengagement. Scale measures compassion toward self. Subscale is: self-kindness, self-judgment, common humanity, isolation, mindfulness, and over-identified. Participants (N=69) in this educational intervention were BSN junior students. The self-efficacy scale was used to create two groups (e.g., high self-efficacy scores, moderate-low self-efficacy scores). Hypothesis 1: Kindness, common humanity, and mindfulness subscales from Pommiers compassion towards others questionnaire would have different mean scores for the two self-efficacy groups. Hypothesis 2: The common humanity, mindfulness, and over-identified subscales from Neff's compassion towards self-questionnaire would have different mean scores for the two self-efficacy groups. Independent t-test analyses (SPSS #25) were significant for Pommier subscales (kindness, p=.007; common humanity, p=.001; mindfulness, p=.001) and for Neff's subscales (common humanity, p=.045; mindfulness, p=.001; over-identified, p=.019). Barring over-identified significant finding, BSN students with high scores on SE had high mean scores on the remaining five subscales.

Biography :

Dale Hilty, Associate Professor at the Mt. Carmel College of Nursing. He received his PhD in counseling psychology from the Department of Psychology at The Ohio State University. He has published studies in the areas of psychology, sociology, and religion. Between April 2017 and April 2018, his ten research teams published 55 posters at local, state, regional, national, and international nursing conferences.

E-mail: dhilty@mccn.edu

 

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