Cong Fu
Hebei University
5 Papers
Cong Fu is an academic researcher from Hebei University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & MEDLINE. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Health literacy and health outcomes in hypertension: An integrative review
TL;DR: There is insufficient evidence to suggest that health literacy is associated with outcomes of hypertension independently, however, there was quality and consistent evidence that hypertensive patients with lower literacy had poorer knowledge.
61
The ‘good death’ in Mainland China - A Scoping Review
Cong Fu,Stinne Glasdam +1 more
TL;DR: The authors in this article explored the understanding of the "good death" among authorities, professionals, patients, and their relatives in end-of-life care settings in mainland China.
26
Cardiac rehabilitation knowledge in patients with coronary heart disease in Baoding city of China: A cross-sectional study
TL;DR: The need for health education is indicated in this study to improve the awareness on CR among CHD patients and patients who lived in rural and had no jobs had less knowledge.
25
The impact of family function on post-traumatic reactions of Chinese adolescents infected with COVID-19: a latent profile study
R. Tian,Cong Fu,Jingyang Li,Yan Wang +3 more
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the influence of family function on different categories of post-traumatic reactions, which refers to PTSD, depression, anxiety and the co-occurrence pattern of growth after trauma.
1
Circumstances affecting patients' euthanasia or medically assisted suicide decisions from the perspectives of patients, relatives, and healthcare professionals: A qualitative systematic review.
TL;DR: A qualitative systematic review was performed following PRISMA recommendations as discussed by the authors, which explored circumstances affecting patients' euthanasia and medically assisted suicide (MAS) decisions from the perspectives of patients, relatives, and healthcare professionals, and illuminated the dynamics in (inter)actions between patients and involved parties that might both impede and facilitate patients' decisions related to euthanasia/MAS, potentially influencing patients' decision-making experiences.