Mahmoud Nesma A, Frere Noha O, Zaitoun Nahla A, Zaitoun Mai M, Elshamy Raghda A
Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University, Zagazig, Egypt.
Department of Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University, Zagazig, Egypt.
J Egypt Public Health Assoc. 2024 Aug 1;99(1):18. doi: 10.1186/s42506-024-00161-z.
Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) is a commonly underestimated disorder that negatively impacts a woman's life. Medical workers, who live a more stressful life, may report an increased rate of PMS. Studies on the relationship between PMS and work-related quality of life for medical professionals are scarce, particularly in the Arab world. This study aimed to compare the frequency of PMS among medical versus non-medical workers at Zagazig University and to assess the association between PMS and their work-related quality of life.
A comparative cross-sectional study was conducted. The sample population consisted of 48 medical and 48 non-medical female workers aged 18-45 years from Zagazig University. The two groups filled out a questionnaire with 3 parts: sociodemographic and occupational data, the Premenstrual Symptoms Screening Tool (PSST), and the Work-Related Quality of Life Scale (WRQL).
Severe PMS was reported in 45.8% of medical workers versus 20.8% of non-medical workers with a statistically significant difference between both groups (p = 0.009). Binary logistic regression showed that being a medical worker, clinical specialty, ≥ 8 years of work, ≥ 24 working hours per week, and having a non-set hourly schedule were predictors for severe PMS. PMS was found to be a statistically significant predictor of poor WRQL (p < 0.001). There was a highly significant negative correlation between the PMS score and the WRQL score (r = - 0.302, p < 0.001).
Among medical workers, PMS is more common and more severe, and WRQL is worse and negatively correlated with PMS. We suggest further studies with larger samples to prove this association and planning for public health programs to screen for and manage PMS among medical workers in our community.
经前综合征(PMS)是一种常被低估的疾病,会对女性生活产生负面影响。生活压力较大的医务工作者可能报告PMS发病率较高。关于PMS与医学专业人员工作相关生活质量之间关系的研究较少,尤其是在阿拉伯世界。本研究旨在比较扎加齐格大学医学工作者与非医学工作者中PMS的发生率,并评估PMS与其工作相关生活质量之间的关联。
进行了一项比较性横断面研究。样本群体由来自扎加齐格大学的48名年龄在18 - 45岁的医学女性工作者和48名非医学女性工作者组成。两组填写了一份包含三个部分的问卷:社会人口学和职业数据、经前症状筛查工具(PSST)以及工作相关生活质量量表(WRQL)。
45.8%的医学工作者报告有严重PMS,而非医学工作者为20.8%,两组之间存在统计学显著差异(p = 0.009)。二元逻辑回归显示,作为医学工作者、临床专业、工作≥8年、每周工作≥24小时以及没有固定的小时排班是严重PMS的预测因素。发现PMS是工作相关生活质量差的统计学显著预测因素(p < 0.001)。PMS评分与WRQL评分之间存在高度显著的负相关(r = - 0.302,p < 0.001)。
在医学工作者中,PMS更常见且更严重,工作相关生活质量更差且与PMS呈负相关。我们建议进行更大样本的进一步研究以证实这种关联,并规划公共卫生项目以筛查和管理我们社区医学工作者中的PMS。