Brady Sonya S, Arguedas Andrés, Huling Jared D, Hellemann Gerhard, Lewis Cora E, Fok Cynthia S, Van Den Eeden Stephen K, Markland Alayne D
Program in Health Disparities Research, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota Medical School.
Division of Biostatistics and Health Data Science, University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
Health Psychol. 2025 Apr 10. doi: 10.1037/hea0001488.
To examine whether subjective social standing is associated with lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) among women and men in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults study, and whether racial identity modifies this association.
The MacArthur Scale of Subjective Social Status was administered in 2000-2001 and 2005-2006; scores were averaged. LUTS were assessed in 2012-2013. Separately for women and men, LUTS were regressed on perceived standing relative to others in one's community and relative to others in the United States. Analyses were adjusted for race, age, parity (for women), benign prostatic hyperplasia (for men), objective indices of social standing, alcohol consumption, smoking, body mass index, and diabetes. The analytic sample consisted of 1,214 women and 874 men, aged 42-59 years.
Both higher subjective social standing in one's community and relative to the United States were associated with a lower likelihood of experiencing more severe LUTS when the variables were entered individually into regression models with adjustment variables. When entered simultaneously, only higher perceived standing relative to others in the United States was associated with less severe LUTS among women, and only higher perceived standing relative to others in one's community was associated with less severe LUTS among men. Racial identity did not modify associations.
Consistent with literature on other health outcomes, lower social standing relative to others in one's community or the United States was associated with LUTS. Research is needed to understand the mechanisms by which perceptions of lower social standing may influence the development, maintenance, or worsening of LUTS. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
在“年轻成年人冠状动脉风险发展研究”中,探讨主观社会地位与男性和女性下尿路症状(LUTS)之间是否存在关联,以及种族身份是否会改变这种关联。
在2000 - 2001年和2005 - 2006年使用麦克阿瑟主观社会地位量表;对得分进行平均。在2012 - 2013年评估LUTS。分别针对女性和男性,将LUTS与相对于所在社区其他人以及相对于美国其他人的感知地位进行回归分析。分析针对种族、年龄、产次(针对女性)、良性前列腺增生(针对男性)、社会地位客观指标、饮酒、吸烟、体重指数和糖尿病进行了调整。分析样本包括1214名女性和874名男性,年龄在42 - 59岁之间。
当将这些变量分别纳入带有调整变量的回归模型时,相对于所在社区和相对于美国的较高主观社会地位均与经历更严重LUTS的可能性较低相关。当同时纳入时,仅相对于美国其他人的较高感知地位与女性中较轻的LUTS相关,仅相对于所在社区其他人的较高感知地位与男性中较轻的LUTS相关。种族身份并未改变这种关联。
与关于其他健康结果的文献一致,相对于所在社区或美国其他人而言较低的社会地位与LUTS相关。需要开展研究以了解较低社会地位的认知可能影响LUTS发生、维持或恶化的机制。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)