Somatic symptom load in men and women from middle to high age in the Gutenberg Health Study - association with psychosocial and somatic factors

被引:0
作者
Manfred E. Beutel
Jörg Wiltink
Jasmin Ghaemi Kerahrodi
Ana N. Tibubos
Elmar Brähler
Andreas Schulz
Philipp Wild
Thomas Münzel
Karl Lackner
Jochem König
Norbert Pfeiffer
Matthias Michal
Michaela Henning
机构
[1] University Medical Center,Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy
[2] Johannes Gutenberg-University,Preventive Cardiology and Preventive Medicine
[3] University Medical Center Mainz, Center for Cardiology
[4] University Medical Center Mainz,Center for Cardiology
[5] University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Cardiology I
[6] University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz,Institute of Medical Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Informatics
[7] University Medical Center Mainz of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz,Institute of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
[8] University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz,Department of Ophthalmology
[9] partner site Rhine-Main,Center for Thrombosis and Hemostasis
[10] University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz,DZHK (German Center for Cardiovascular Research)
[11] University Hospital Cologne,Center for Translational Vascular Biology (CTVB)
[12] University of Cologne,Department of Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy
来源
Scientific Reports | / 9卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The purpose of the study was (1) to determine the prevalence of somatic symptoms in men and women in the general population and (2) to identify the contributions of psychosocial factors and somatic disease on symptom reporting. A total of 7,925 participants aged 40 to 80 years underwent medical and psychological assessments, based on the PHQ-15 (Patient Health Questionnaire). We excluded 3 items in order to avoid confounding findings: 2 items overlapping with the depression measure (PHQ-9) and the menstruation complaints item which biases sex comparisons. Pain complaints (arms, legs, joints, back pain) affected the majority of men and women, and somatic symptom reporting increased with age. When confounding has been reduced, psychosocial factors (lack of social support, adverse life events, loneliness, depression, generalized anxiety, panic, social phobia) have remained the strongest predictors of somatic symptoms. As shown by the interaction between sex and depression, depression plays a smaller role for somatic symptom reporting in women vs. men. Findings highlight the complex psychosocial and somatic contributions to somatic symptom reporting.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 72 条
[1]  
Hinz A(2017)Frequency of somatic symptoms in the general population: Normative values for the Patient Health Questionnaire-15 (PHQ-15) Psychosom Res. 96 27-31
[2]  
Kocalevent RD(2013)Standardization of a screening instrument (PHQ-15) for somatization syndromes in the general population BMC psychiatry 13 311-7
[3]  
Hinz A(2012)The epidemiology of multiple somatic symptoms J Psychosom Res. 72 399-407
[4]  
Brähler E(2014)The somatic symptom scale-8 (SSS-8): a brief measure of somatic symptom burden JAMA internal medicine. 174 33-43
[5]  
Creed FH(2017)Brief assessment of subjective health complaints: Development, validation and population norms of a brief form of the Giessen Subjective Complaints List (GBB-8) J Psychosom Res. 95 191-9
[6]  
Gierk B(2008)Depression, anxiety and somatization in primary care: syndrome overlap and functional impairment Gen Hosp Psychiatry 30 91-3
[7]  
Kliem S(2016)Exploding myths about medically unexplained symptoms J Psychosom Res. 85 946-55
[8]  
Löwe B(2007)Management of functional somatic syndroms Lancet 369 989-95
[9]  
Creed FH(1997)Somatization in cross-cultural perspective: a World Health Organization study in primary care Am J Psychiatry. 154 216-22
[10]  
Henningsen P(1999)Affective, somatoform and anxiety disorders in Germany–initial results of an additional federal survey of “psychiatric disorders” Gesundheitswesen (Bundesverband der Arzte des Offentlichen Gesundheitsdienstes (Germany)). 61 266-75