Awarded/Presented
Tags
Bleeding Disorders Conference
Psychosocial Issues
Researchers
Ana Paola Abreu Bastar, Valeria Escobar Ruiz, María Fernanda Domínguez Ballesteros, Leydi Lizbhet Morales de la Cruz, María Laura Giselle Torres Chablé

Bleeding disorders are a group of conditions that result when the blood cannot clot properly (American Society of Hematology, 2017). The most frequently occurring bleeding disorders include von Willebrand Disease (VWD), Hemophilia A, and Hemophilia B (FDA ́s, 2016).Some studies shows that is important to considered the depression in the psychological approach of patients with a bleeding disorder (Recht, Batt, Witkop, Gut, Cooper, Kempton, 2016 and Osorio, Bazán, Izquierdo, 2016). Beck ́s theory defined depression in cognitive terms. He saw the essential elements of the disorder as the “cognitive triad”: (a) negative view of self, (b) a negative view of the world, and (c) a negative view of the future. The depressed person views the world through an organized set of depressive schemata that distort experience about self, the world, and the future in a negative direction (Beck, A. 1972 in Lynn, P. 2015).

Objective:

Compare depression levels in groups of patients with haemophilia, Von Willebrand (VWD) and apparently healthy people.

Methods:

The study design was quantitative, non-experimental, transactional and correlational in which the difference between three groups of participants was analyzed: 41 patients with hemophilia A or B, 10 patients with VW and 20 apparently healthy people. The sample was obtained from Tabasqueña de Hemofilia A.C. through a non - random sampling of subjects - type. Depression symptoms were obtained by Beck ́s inventory and for control variables a questionnaire was applied. All of the findings were assessed by SPSS 21 for Windows program. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics, comparisons between groups were evaluated with Games-Howell coefficient and post hoc test.

Summary:

71 participants with a mean age of 28.24. Considering the patients who have a bleeding disorder, 74.50% of the sample was deficient of factor VIII, 11.76% of factor von Willebrand, 11.76% of factor VII and 1.96% of factor IX; 82.35% of them have access to treatment while 17.64 have not access. Statistically significant differences were found only in apparently healthy people compared to haemophilia patients (p=0.031). A marginal difference was detected between the group of apparently healthy people and von Willebrand patients (p=0.081).

Conclusions:

The presence of a coagulation disease increase the levels of depression and the severity of the symptoms.

Key Words: Hemophilia, Von Willebrand, Depression.