Premium
Low Urinary Tract. Lower urinary tract symptoms in men: self‐perceptions and the concept of bother
Author(s) -
Gan Kenneth,
Glover Lesley,
O'Neill Marie,
Emberton Mark
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
bju international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.773
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1464-410X
pISSN - 1464-4096
DOI - 10.1111/j.1464-410x.2005.05720.x
Subject(s) - lower urinary tract symptoms , context (archaeology) , medicine , anxiety , international prostate symptom score , outpatient clinic , clinical psychology , psychology , psychiatry , prostate , paleontology , cancer , biology
An interesting study from the UK explores the meaning men attach to their experiences of having LUTS and to understand the meaning of the word bother in this context. Their findings are very helpful to clinicians, and perhaps to people constructing clinical trials in the future. A second report assesses the bothersomeness and impact on quality of life of urinary incontinence in women in France, Germany, Spain and the UK. The author concluded from their study that when determining the most appropriate management strategy doctors should consider the experience of being incontinent as being unique to each individual. OBJECTIVE To explore the meaning that men attach to their experiences of having lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) and to understand ‘bother’ in the context of those meanings. PATIENTS AND METHODS Sixteen men with symptoms suggestive of LUTS and/or an enlarged prostate were recruited from the outpatient urology clinic of a London teaching hospital. They were assessed before or shortly after their first appointment, during which demographic information, including age, occupation, marital status and ethnicity, was obtained and an individualized repertory grid was completed. Each man also completed the International Prostate Symptom Score, which included an item measuring overall bother, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. RESULTS Most participants held very negative views about what it meant to have prostate problems and viewed them as being associated with old age. Nevertheless, they also had reasonably high levels of self‐esteem. However, there was evidence that these had been higher before they had prostate problems, and that self‐esteem might decline over time. Bother was related to symptom scores and to anxiety. Also, a perception that other people, particularly their partner, saw them in a more negative light because of their symptoms was associated with higher levels of bother. CONCLUSIONS The findings suggest that men attempt to preserve a sense of a relatively youthful and intact ‘self’ in the face of advancing years and a progressive disease that was viewed as being associated with old age. Overall, these men had a reasonably secure self‐image and they deployed a range of cognitive strategies to maintain this. Bother appears to be a combination of symptom severity, psychological distress, negative evaluations of the condition and beliefs about the reactions of others. Reducing anxiety and challenging negative stereotypes and expectations that others would view them negatively if their problems were known might reduce bother. Attending to these factors could enable watchful waiting to be optimized by reducing bother. Trials to evaluate interventions drawing on these principles would be valuable.