Beatrix Rafael
University of Szeged
16 Papers
47 Citations
Beatrix Rafael is an academic researcher from University of Szeged. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Disease. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 12 publications.
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Papers
Are vital exhaustion and depression independent risk factors for cardiovascular disease morbidity
Piroska Balog,Paul R.J. Falger,Gábor Szabó,Beatrix Rafael,Andrea Székely,Barna Konkolÿ Thege +5 more
TL;DR: Vital exhaustion and depressive symptomatology showed a different pattern in their relationship with CVD incidence, with vital exhaustion being the more robust predictor.
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Vital exhaustion and anxiety are related to subjective quality of life in patients with acute myocardial infarct before cardiac rehabilitation.
TL;DR: This study revealed that only vital exhaustion and anxiety showed a significant correlation with well-being in patients, and there were gender differences in predictive variables ofWell-being.
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Psychometric Properties of the Multidimensional Health Locus of Control Scale Form C in a Non-Western Culture
TL;DR: The results showed that the Hungarian adaptation of the MHLC-C had a slightly different structure than the one originally hypothesized: in the present sample, a three-factor structure emerged where the items of the Doctors and the Others subscales loaded onto a single common component.
Szorongás, depresszió, egészségkontrollhit és az egészség-magatartással való kapcsolatuk ischaemiás szívbetegek körében
TL;DR: Az egeszsegkontrollhit tekinteteben e betegek koreben a mas szemelyek befolyasaban valo hit volt a legerősebb is kiemelkedő szerepet jatszanak a mentalis es az eletmodbeli tenyezők.
Correlation of social support and healthy lifestyle
Zsófia Ocsovszky,Beatrix Rafael,Tamás Martos,Márta Csabai,Zsolt Bagyura,Viola Sallay,Béla Merkely +6 more
TL;DR: Multidimensional Social Support Scale has satisfactory stability and consistency to measure health-related social support and showed correlation with the measures of mental health (depression, stress-level, wellbeing), and moderate association with intense exercises.