2 research outputs found
Perceived social support among students of medical sciences
Background: Social support is emotional and instrumental assistance from family, friends or neighbors, and has
an important but different impact on individuals, mainly depending on contextual factors.
Objective: To determine the status of perceived social support and related personal and family characteristics of
medical sciences students in Ahvaz, Iran.
Methods: In this cross-sectional study, the target population included the students of Ahvaz Jundishapur
University of Medical Sciences in the second semester of 2013-2014, of whom 763 were selected by cluster
random sampling method. The study tool was a two-part questionnaire containing 48 self-administered questions
including 25 questions of measurements of personal and family characteristics and a Persian modified version of
Vaux's social support scale (Cronbach's α=0.745). Data were analyzed with T test, ANOVA and chi-square and
using SPSS version 16 and 0.05 was considered as the level of significance.
Results: The mean score of the perceived social support was 17.06±3.6 and 60.3% of them reported low social
support. There was a significant relationship among the perceived social support and sex (p=0.02), faculty
(p<0.0001), ethnicity (p=0.034) and the duration of weekly residence in dormitory (p=0.031). But no significant
relationship was found between this variable and other individual and familial characteristics.
Conclusion: Based on students` low social support and importance of social support in reducing stress and
academic failure, the planners need to provide efficient supportive interventions for student
Striving for Being in the Line of Life: Personal Active Ageing Strategies in Iranian Seniors
Active ageing is a multidimensional, relative, and context-dependent concept with different paths and outcomes. This qualitative study aimed to explore personal active aging strategies in a specific context. Following a directed thematic analysis procedure, we conducted semi-structured individual interviews with 39 seniors (men and women) between the ages of 60-97 years selected with purposeful sampling, data collection and analysis were concurrent. We used directed content analysis to analyze the data from interviews, written narratives, and field notes. The reliability of data was fulfilled following Lincoln and Guba criteria. We stopped data collection when no new concepts were added, and data saturation occurred. Based on the experience of seniors, we identified four categories: (a) Reventive, (b) Coping, (c) Internal Self-Control, and (d) Opportunity Exploiting Strategies. These described the active aging strategies when encountering age-related change. Utilizing these strategies, the senior accompanied the lifetime. The finding suggests that active aging is a continuous process in confronting age-related change. The identified strategies can help promote active aging by familiarizing the elderly with opportunities of life and training them in how to use these strategies