The Effect of Heating on Thermal Comfort and Anxiety
Anxiety, Nurse-Patient Relations

About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Anxiety focused on measuring nursing, active heating, thermal comfort, anxiety
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Being scheduled for open abdominal surgery
- Being an inpatient in the obstetrics and gynecology ward
- 2-4 h surgery duration
- 1 and 2 ASA scores
- Being able to speak Turkish
- Being 18-65 years of age
Exclusion Criteria:
- Mental retardation and psychiatric disorder,
- The presence of severe lesions or wounds on the skin
- Being an alcohol and drug addict
Sites / Locations
- Selcuk Universty
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Active Comparator
Experimental
Experimental
Group C
Group A
Group B
Usual care (Group C): The patients in this group received routine hospital care. Vital signs, thermal comfort, and anxiety levels of the patients were evaluated.
The patients in Group A were warmed up using a gown blowing warm air starting at least 30 min prior to the surgery until they were anesthetized. Vital signs, thermal comfort, and anxiety levels of the patients were evaluated.
Routine care was provided for the patients in Group B in the preoperative and intraoperative periods. In the postoperative period, patients were warmed up using a gown blowing warm air after they were transferred to the post-anesthesia care unit, and continued to be warmed up on the basis of the temperature set by themselves until they wore their own clothes in the ward. Vital signs, thermal comfort, and anxiety levels of the patients were evaluated.