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Psychosomatic and gender aspects of studying functional gastrointestinal disorders
Author(s) -
O. Yu. Bastrikov
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
èksperimentalʹnaâ i kliničeskaâ gastroènterologiâ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1682-8658
DOI - 10.31146/1682-8658-ecg-178-6-77-81
Subject(s) - neuroticism , anxiety , coping (psychology) , clinical psychology , medicine , cohort , social support , psychiatry , psychology , personality , psychotherapist , social psychology
The cross—sectional study included 194 senior students of a medical university, of which 156 were women and 38 were men. To judge the frequency and severity of the course of PD and IBS, the 7x7 questionnaire was used. A set of psychodiagnostic questionnaires included: an integrative anxiety test; a scale for psychological express—diagnostics of the level of neurotization; the methodology of the Strategy of coping behavior. The psychological characteristics of the examined men with PD and IBS were characterized by a predominance of subscales of personal anxiety (“emotional discomfort”, “asthenic component”, “phobic component”, “anxious assessment of perspective”). In the repertoire of strategies coping with stress, coping “acceptance of responsibility” and, on the contrary, less often “planning of solving a problem” was much more common. The women with the presence of PD and IBS, along with exceeding the general level of personal anxiety often have subscales such as “emotional discomfort”, “phobic component”, “anxious assessment of perspective”. Among the prevailing coping strategies noted “distance”, “the search for social support”, “acceptance of responsibility”, “fl ight—avoidance”. In addition, the female “cohort” with PD and IBS, in contrast to the male, was characterized by a significantly high level of neuroticism. 

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