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Health status in women with Turner syndrome: a questionnaire study on health status, education, work participation and aspects of sexual functioning
Author(s) -
Næss Eva Elisabeth,
Bahr David,
Gravholt Claus H.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
clinical endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.055
H-Index - 147
eISSN - 1365-2265
pISSN - 0300-0664
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2265.2009.03715.x
Subject(s) - norwegian , psychosocial , medicine , context (archaeology) , gerontology , quality of life (healthcare) , turner syndrome , clinical psychology , psychology , psychiatry , pediatrics , paleontology , philosophy , biology , linguistics , nursing
Summary Context  Turner syndrome (TS) is a complex medical condition with specific cognitive and psychosocial characteristics and frequent medical morbidity. Few studies have investigated the influence this has on health status, education and ability to work. Objective  To explore health status, level of education, work participation, medical conditions, physical activity, satisfaction with life and aspects of sexual functioning in adult TS women and compare with a matched control group. Design  A questionnaire was sent to 168 adult women with TS >18 years registered in a database of Frambu Resource Centre for Rare Disorders and The TS Association in Norway. We assessed health status with Short Form 36, education with Norwegian Standard Classification of Education, and employment with The General Nordic Questionnaire. Life satisfaction was measured with LiSat‐9, and questions on psychological strain during life phases were included. Results  Eighty women with TS (34·0 ± 11·7 years) and 214 controls (32·9 ± 10·6) responded. The TS group reported significantly more health problems and impaired health status in the two subscales “physical functioning” and “general health” ( P  < 0·001). Level of education and work participation was similar among TS and controls. TS moved away from their parents’ home later than controls (20·4 ± 4·0 vs. 18·7 ± 2·1, P  = 0·001). Age at sexual debut differed significantly (21·2 ± 4·3 vs. 17·3 ± 2·4 years, P  < 0·001). Conclusion  TS attains the same level of education and level of employment as controls, they report more frequent occurrence of medical conditions, but scored lower on only two subscales in the SF‐36. Despite considerable medical morbidity, TS seem to cope well with life.

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