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result(s) for
"Subjective health"
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Symptom burden in middle-aged women, the role of immigrant status
by
Mdala, Ibrahimu
,
Waage, Christin Wiegels
,
Braend, Anja Maria
in
Allergies
,
Aquatic birds
,
Biostatistics
2025
Background
Subjective health complaints (SHCs) are symptoms from various organs that do not have an obvious explanation. Immigrants in Western countries are often exposed to multiple stressors that may trigger SHCs. Increased symptom load may reflect subjective health and functioning in the present and in the future. We, therefore, aimed to identify symptom load and distribution of subjective health complaints among middle-aged women by immigrant status.
Methods
This is a cross-sectional study which uses 11-year follow-up data from the STORK Groruddalen Cohort Study of 823 healthy pregnant women enrolled in primary antenatal care in a multi-ethnic city district in Oslo from 2008 to 2010. 11 years later, 379 women (53% of the eligible) provided questionnaire data on subjective health complaints drawn from the Subjective Health Complaints Inventory (SHCI) and regarding demographics and health issues collected through interviews. Participants were divided into three immigrant status groups: born in Norway by Norwegian parents (reference), born in Norway with one or two foreign born parents, and born abroad.
The primary outcomes were the total score and the scores for each of the five domains in the SHCI: musculoskeletal pain, pseudo-neurology and gastrointestinal problems, allergy and flu.
In addition, we studied the distribution of the 29 health complaints from the SHCI.
Results
Musculoskeletal symptoms were most severe and prevalent in all three immigrant-status groups.
Compared to women born in Norway with Norwegian parents (reference), women born abroad had significantly higher total scores (median: 11.0 (IQR: 14.82–21.45) vs. 7.6 (9.38–12.78) (
p
= 0.002)). For musculoskeletal pain, the crude median scores were 4.3 (0.92–4.36) for women born abroad and 2.1 (3.81–5.72) for women born in Norway with Norwegian parents (
p
< 0.001).
The following health complaints, headache, migraine, dizziness, pain in feet on exertion, bloating, constipation, chest pain, breathing difficulties and asthma, were more prevalent in women born abroad than in the reference group, before and after adjusting for age and education.
Conclusion
SHCs were more frequent and severe among women born abroad compared to the reference group. This knowledge is essential to identify women at risk and target appropriate interventions.
Trial registration
The study (STORK G 2) was prospectively registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (registration number: NCT03870724), registration date: 08.03.2019.
Journal Article
The paradox of aging and health-related quality of life in Asian Chinese: results from the Healthy Aging Longitudinal Study in Taiwan
2020
Background
Declines in health, physical, cognitive, and mental function with age suggest a lower level of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in late life; however, previous studies found that the associations were weak and varied, depending on the study designs and cohort characteristics.
Methods
The present study examined the paradox of aging in an East Asian context by regressing the age patterns of objective health indicators (physical, cognitive, and mental function), and subjective HRQoL (12-item Short Form, SF-12), on the independent and interactive effects of age and physical function in a cohort study of 5022 community-dwelling adults aged 55 and older in Taiwan.
Results
Age patterns differed across measures. The SF-12 mental health score (MCS) showed a slight positive association with age and this effect remained stable after controlling for various age-related covariates. The SF-12 physical health score (PCS), in turn, was negatively associated with age. Age differences in PCS were fully explained by age decrements in objective physical health. However, consistent with the so-called paradox of aging, the association between objective and subjective physical health weakened with age.
Conclusion
These findings add to prior evidence indicating that — in spite of objective health decrements — subjective HRQoL is maintained in later life among Asian Chinese. Also, these paradoxical patterns appear to vary for mental and physical components of HRQoL, and future research is needed to explore the underlying mechanism.
Trial registration
Healthy Aging Longitudinal Study in Taiwan (HALST) is retrospectively registered at
ClinicalTrials.gov
on January 24, 2016 with trial registration number
NCT02677831
.
Journal Article
Perceived Quality of Life and Health Complaints in Children Exposed to Intimate Partner Violence
by
Axberg, Ulf
,
Almqvist, Kjerstin
,
Broberg, Anders G.
in
Applied Psychology
,
Attachment
,
Children
2014
Children 9 to 13 years old exposed to intimate partner violence (IPV) reported on their violence exposure, attachment to both parents, temperament (negative emotionality and emotion regulation), perceived quality of life, and health complaints. Half of the children perceived their quality of life as good and did not have recurrent health complaints. When controlling for socioeconomic status, health complaints were associated with higher IPV exposure and negative emotionality, whereas quality of life was associated with attachment security, higher capacity for emotion regulation, and lower negative emotionality. These results underscore the importance of increasing and supporting the capacity of children exposed to IPV to handle and express their emotions, as well as making school nurses and other primary care practitioners more attentive to IPV as a possible background factor in children’s health complaints.
Journal Article
Ageism and older people’s health and well-being during the Covid-19-pandemic: the moderating role of subjective aging
2021
In the Covid-19 pandemic, being older means being in a special focus: Probabilities for severe infections and mortality rise with increasing age and protective measures for this population group have been increased. This was accompanied by public discourse that portrayed older adults stereotypically as vulnerable and frail but also highlighted the hardships younger people have to endure to protect them. Given the possibly detrimental effects of ageism on individuals and societies, we were interested in older adults’ perception of ageism in the Corona-crisis and its relation to their health and well-being. Furthermore, we were interested in subjective aging variables as moderators in the ageism–health relationship. In June 2020, N = 611 independently living people aged 60 + from the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg were recruited via a survey research institute and interviewed online or by phone. They reported on perceived ageism in different contexts, their life satisfaction, subjective health, subjective age and self-perceptions of aging. Depending on context, ageism was perceived by around 20% of participants, and overall negatively related to subjective health and life satisfaction after the onset of the pandemic. Moderated hierarchical regressions showed that a younger subjective age buffered the negative effect of ageism on subjective health, while perceiving aging as social loss increased its effect on life satisfaction. We discuss the importance of addressing and reducing ageism (not only) in times of crisis and the consequences for individuals and societies.
Journal Article
Gender differences in the relationship between informal caregiving and subjective health: the mediating role of health promoting behaviors
2022
Background
In most of developed societies, the prevalence of informal care is on the rise due to rapid population ageing. This study investigates longitudinal associations between informal caregiving and health among caregivers and potential gender differences in this relationship. Moreover, drawing on the Health Promotion Model, this study examines the mediating role of health promoting behaviors in the link between informal caregiving and caregiver’s health.
Methods
Seven waves of a large-scale (
N
= 9,608), a nationally representative longitudinal study of middle- and old-aged adults in Korea between 2006 and 2018, were used. To address the possibility of omitted variable bias, this study employed ordinary least squares models with lagged dependent variables (OLS-LDV) as well as fixed effects (FE) models. Univariate Sobel-Goodman mediation tests were used.
Results
Findings from OLS-LDV models showed that transition into informal caregiving is negatively associated with health satisfaction and self-rated health. FE results also suggest that our results are robust to controlling for unobserved heterogeneity. In the model where informal caregiving is interacted with gender, we found that these associations were largely driven by women caregivers. Results from Sobel-Goodman tests revealed that a decrease in regular exercise partially explains the observed association between informal caregiving and subjective health outcomes (11% for health satisfaction and 8% for self-rated health).
Conclusions
Although informal caregiving can be a rewarding role, it poses a threat to caregiver’s subjective health. Findings of this hold important implications and provide evidence in support of a gender-conscious approach to improve the health and well-being of informal caregivers.
Journal Article
The Association between Loneliness, Mental Well-Being, and Self-Esteem among Adolescents in Four Nordic Countries
by
Löfstedt, Petra
,
Eriksson, Charli
,
Välimaa, Raili
in
Adolescent
,
adolescents
,
Cardiovascular disease
2021
Positive mental health is central to adolescent well-being. The present study examines the prevalence of loneliness and positive mental health indicators (mental well-being and self-esteem) in four Nordic countries and associations between loneliness, mental well-being, and high self-esteem. This study is based on data from the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study which was conducted in 2018 in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, and Sweden. Participants were 5883 15-year-old boys and girls. To examine the associations between loneliness, mental well-being, and self-esteem, structural equation modeling (SEM) was applied. In the comparison of Nordic countries, the prevalence of loneliness was highest among Finnish and Icelandic adolescents. High mental well-being and high self-esteem were most prevalent in Denmark and Sweden. In general, boys scored higher on positive mental health indicators and girls on loneliness. Loneliness was also a strong indicator of low mental well-being and low self-esteem in all Nordic countries. Loneliness is not only associated with mental health problems such as anxiety and depression, but it is also a risk factor for adolescents’ positive mental health. Positive mental health is important for healthy maturation and there is a need to develop initiatives to reduce adolescent loneliness and so support positive development.
Journal Article
Do health literacy, physical health and past rehabilitation utilization explain educational differences in the subjective need for medical rehabilitation? Results of the lidA cohort study
by
Schröder, Chloé Charlotte
,
Rohrbacher, Max
,
Breckenkamp, Jürgen
in
Academic achievement
,
Aging
,
Analysis
2024
Background
Medical rehabilitation can be helpful for maintaining workers’ health and work ability. Its contribution to longer working lives is of high economic relevance in aging populations. In Germany, individuals must apply for rehabilitative measures themselves. Therefore, the subjective need for rehabilitation (SNR) is a prerequisite for rehabilitation access. A low education level is associated with poor health, lower health literacy and more frequent utilization of health services. In the present study, we investigated whether lower educational levels are also associated with a greater SNR and whether health literacy, past rehabilitation utilization and physical health play a mediating role in this path in older employees.
Methods
3,130 socially insured older employees (born in 1959 or 1965) who participated in the German prospective lidA (leben in der Arbeit) cohort-study in 2011, 2014 and 2018 were included. A causal mediation analysis with an inverse odds weighting approach was performed with the SNR as the dependent variable; educational level as the independent variable; and health, health literacy and past rehabilitation utilization as the mediating variables. Sociodemographic variables were adjusted for.
Results
The SNR was significantly greater in subjects with a low education level, poor physical health, inadequate health literacy and those who had utilized rehabilitation in the past. For health literacy, past rehabilitation utilization and physical health, a significant partial mediating effect on the SNR was found for employees with low compared to those with high education levels. However, the combined mediating effect of all the mediators was lower than the sum of their individual effects. Among those with medium or high education levels, none of the variables constituted a significant mediator.
Conclusions
The path between a low education level and a high SNR is mediated by inadequate health literacy, past rehabilitation utilization and poor physical health; these factors do not act independently of each other. Promoting health education may lower the SNR by improving physical health and health literacy. While improving physical health is beneficial for individuals, improved health literacy can be economically advantageous for the health system by reducing inappropriate expectations of rehabilitation benefits and subsequent applications for rehabilitation.
Journal Article
Loneliness and subjective health complaints among school-aged children
2018
Aim: The first aim of this study was to explore the prevalence
of loneliness and subjective health complaints (SHCs) among school-aged children
in Finland. The second aim was to analyse to what extent perceived loneliness
explains any variance in SHCs among school-aged children.
Method: A representative sample of 5925 Finnish children
and adolescents from grades 5 (Mage=11.8 years), 7
(Mage=13.8) and 9
(Mage=15.8) completed the Health Behaviour in
School-aged Children (HBSC) survey. Descriptive statistics were used to examine
the prevalence of health complaints and loneliness. Structural equation
modelling was used to test how strongly loneliness was associated with SHCs.
Results: The prevalence of loneliness and SHCs was higher
among girls and increased with age. Loneliness was a significant predictor of
health complaints, especially of psychological symptoms among girls and among
ninth grade students. Conclusions: The findings indicate
that loneliness is a major risk to the health and well-being of school-aged
children. The strong association between loneliness and SHCs highlights the
importance of active preventive actions to reduce loneliness.
Journal Article
Women suffer but men die: survey data exploring whether this self-reported health paradox is real or an artefact of gender stereotypes
2023
Background
Despite consistently reporting poorer health, women universally outlive men. We examine whether gender differences in lived circumstances considered, and meaning attributed to SRH by women and men might explain this paradox.
Methods
In an online survey 917 adults rated their health (SRH) and mental health (SRMH) and reflected upon what life experiences they considered in making their ratings. Descriptive findings were sex-disaggregated. The multiple experiences listed were then subject to factor analyses using principal components methods and orthogonal rotation.
Results
Women reported poorer SRH and SRMH. They considered a wider range of circumstances, weighing all but self-confidence and behaviors as more important to SRH than did men. Two underlying components, psychosocial context and clinical status were identified overall. Physical health and pain were more important elements of men’s clinical status and behaviors. Comparisons with others of the same age played a larger role in male psycho-social context. Two components also underpinned SRMH. These were clinical problems and psycho-social circumstances for which self-confidence was only important among men.
Conclusions
Women’s and men’s common interpretation of measures like SRH suggests that women’s health disadvantage is neither artefactual nor determined by gendered meanings of measures and does not explain the paradox. SRH and SRMH captured social circumstances for all. Convergence of characteristics women and men consider as central to health is evidence of the dynamism of gender with evolving social norms. The remaining divergence speaks to persisting traditional male stereotypes.
Journal Article
Item response theory and differential test functioning analysis of the HBSC-Symptom-Checklist across 46 countries
by
Kaman, Anne
,
Ravens-Sieberer, Ulrike
,
Catunda, Carolina
in
Back pain
,
Child development
,
Differential item functioning
2022
Background
The Symptom Checklist (SCL) developed by the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study is a non-clinical measure of psychosomatic complaints (e.g., headache and feeling low) that has been used in numerous studies. Several studies have investigated the psychometric characteristics of this scale; however, some psychometric properties remain unclear, among them especially a) dimensionality, b) adequacy of the Graded Response Model (GRM), and c) measurement invariance across countries.
Methods
Data from 229,906 adolescents aged 11, 13 and 15 from 46 countries that participated in the 2018 HBSC survey were analyzed. Adolescents were selected using representative sampling and surveyed by questionnaire in the classroom. Dimensionality was investigated using exploratory graph analysis. In addition, we investigated whether the GRM provided an adequate description of the data. Reliability over the latent variable continuum and differential test functioning across countries were also examined.
Results
Exploratory graph analyses showed that SCL can be considered as one-dimensional in 16 countries. However, a comparison of the unidimensional with a post-hoc bifactor GRM showed that deviation from a hypothesized one-dimensional structure was negligible in most countries. Multigroup invariance analyses supported configural and metric invariance, but not scalar invariance across 32 countries. Alignment analysis showed non-invariance especially for the items irritability, feeling nervous/bad temper and feeling low.
Conclusion
HBSC-SCL appears to represent a consistent and reliable unidimensional instrument across most countries. This bodes well for population health analyses that rely on this scale as an early indicator of mental health status.
Journal Article