Impact of a Healthy Nails Program on Nail-Biting in Turkish Schoolchildren

Author:

Ergun Ayse1,Toprak Rumeysa2,Sisman Fatma Nevin1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Health Science, Public Health Nursing Department, Division of Nursing, Marmara Unıversity, Haydarpasa, Uskudar-Istanbul, Turkey

2. Suluova State Hospital, Amasya, Turkey

Abstract

This study was conducted to examine the effect of a healthy nails program on nail-biting in Turkish schoolchildren. This quasi-experimental study was of pretest–posttest control group design. A total of 50 students of a primary school formed the intervention group, while 53 students from the same school formed the control group. Data were collected with a demographic form, a nail-biting follow-up form, and photographs of the fingernails. It was found that 68.9% of students were biting seven or more of their nails; 46.6% had damaged nail beds. In the intervention group, the rate of the children who were not biting their nails (baseline = 0%, 4th week = 56.0%, 8th week = 64.0%) increased significantly compared to the control group (baseline = 0%, 4th week = 15.1%, 8th week = 18.9%). Outcomes indicate the efficacy of the healthy nails program in reducing the nail-biting problem in schoolchildren.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nursing (miscellaneous)

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1. Güncel Yasal Düzenlemeler Doğrultusunda Okul Sağlığı Hemşireliği;Celal Bayar Üniversitesi Sağlık Bilimleri Enstitüsü Dergisi;2024-06-28

2. Onychophagia as a clinical symptom: A pilot study of physicians and literature review;Science Progress;2021-10

3. THE IMPORTANCE OF EDUCATION TO REDUCE SELF-DESTRUCTIVE NAIL HABITS;SOCIETY. INTEGRATION. EDUCATION. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference;2021-05-28

4. The effectiveness of a nail‐biting prevention program among primary school students;Journal for Specialists in Pediatric Nursing;2018-05-24

5. The effect of psychological state and social support on nail-biting in adolescents: An exploratory study;School Psychology International;2017-03-22

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