Autoeficacia y Miedo a la Muerte en adultos con familiares contagiados por COVID-19 de Lima Metropolitana
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Advisors
Rázuri Tapia, Karen VictoriaPortocarrero Ramos, Carlos Alberto
Issue Date
24-05-10Keywords
Autoeficacia generalCOVID-19
familiares
Lima
Miedo a la Muerte
Fear of death
Lima
relatives
Self-efficacy
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Self-efficacy and Fear of death in adults with infected relatives by COVID-19 in Metropolitan LimaDOI
http://doi.org/10.19083/tesis/673879Additional Links
https://audio.com/raupc/audio/12596Abstract
La investigación examinó la relación entre la autoeficacia general y las dimensiones de miedo a la muerte en adultos con familiares diagnosticados con la COVID-19 que recibieron un tratamiento domiciliario mediante monitoreo médico de Lima Metropolitana. Se planteó una investigación asociativa en el que participaron 109 mujeres y 93 hombres, cuyas edades promedian 42 años con familiares infectados por el virus. Se utilizaron las escalas de Autoeficacia General (EAL) y de Miedo a la Muerte (EMMCL). Como resultados, se destacó una relación positiva entre los niveles de autoeficacia en adultos y las dimensiones de miedo a la muerte. En cuanto al análisis comparativo, se encontraron diferencias significativas al comparar las dimensiones del miedo a la muerte según sexo, observándose una puntuación mayor de miedo mayor en las mujeres en comparación a los hombres. También, se encontraron diferencias entre familiares contagiados fallecidos y recuperados. Se concluyó que la hipótesis general propuesta no se cumple, ya que los resultados muestran una baja o ninguna relación entre la autoeficacia general y las diversas dimensiones del miedo a la muerte.The study examined the relationship between general self-efficacy and dimensions of death anxiety among adults with family members diagnosed with COVID-19 undergoing home treatment in Metropolitan Lima. An associative investigation was conducted with 109 women and 93 men, averaging 42 years of age, whose relatives were infected with the virus. The General Self-Efficacy Scale (EAL) and the Death Anxiety Scale (EMMCL) were employed. Findings indicated a positive correlation between adult self-efficacy levels and dimensions of death anxiety. Significant differences were observed in the comparative analysis of death anxiety dimensions by gender, with women exhibiting higher scores compared to men. Disparities were also noted between deceased and recovered infected family members. Consequently, the overarching hypothesis was not supported, as the results demonstrated a weak or nonexistent association between general self-efficacy and various dimensions of death anxiety.
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info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesisRights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessLanguage
spaEmbedded videos
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
http://doi.org/10.19083/tesis/673879
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