Across three cohorts, additionally stratified by gender, the S-GSE comprised one single latent factor and showed high internal consistency. However, since S-GSE was more strongly related to self-assessments of mental work capacity than physical work capacity regardless of sick-leave status, the S-GSE may not be a strong predictor of beliefs about physical work capacity across all populations.
BackgroundIntimate Partner Violence (IPV) is the most common type of violence targeting women. IPV includes acts of physical aggression, sexual coercion, psychological abuse and controlling behaviors and these forms of violence often coexist in the same relationship. Living with IPV is associated with serious mental health outcomes such as depression and depressive symptoms. Few population based studies from Sweden have investigated the relationship between different forms of IPV and women’s depressive symptoms and even fewer used controlling behavior as an independent variable in such studies. The aim of this study was therefore to assess the prevalence of exposure to IPV in terms of controlling behavior, sexual, and physical violence and their association with self-reported symptoms of depression in a female population based sample.MethodsThe cross-sectional, population based sample contained 573 women aged 18–65 years randomly selected in Sweden. Five self-reported symptoms that define depression in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders were assessed. Physical and sexual violence were inquired about using the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Violence Against Women Instrument (VAWI), while controlling behavior was assessed with the Controlling Behavior Scale (CBS). Associations between different forms of IPV and symptoms of depression were estimated by crude and adjusted odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI).ResultsBivariable associations revealed that women exposed to controlling behavior, had higher OR of depressive symptoms compared to unexposed women (OR 2.43; 95% CI 1.63–3.63). Women exposed to physical and sexual violence had also a higher OR of depressive symptoms (OR 3.78; 95% CI 1.99–7.17 and OR 5.10; 95% CI 1.74–14.91 respectively). After adjusting for socio-demographic and psychosocial covariates, all three forms of IPV showed statistically significant associations with self-reported symptoms of depression.ConclusionsA strength with this study is the analysis of controlling behavior and its association with self-reported symptoms of depression in a female population based sample. Exposure to controlling behavior, physical and sexual violence by an intimate partner were clearly associated with women’s self-reported symptoms of depression.
BackgroundSome previous studies have proposed potential explanatory factors for the social gradient in sickness absence. Yet, this research area is still in its infancy and in order to comprise the full range of socioeconomic positions there is a need for studies conducted on random population samples. The main aim of the present study was to investigate if somatic and mental symptoms, mental wellbeing, job strain, and physical work environment could explain the association between low socioeconomic position and belonging to a sample of new cases of sick-listed employees.MethodsThis study was conducted on one random working population sample (n = 2763) and one sample of newly sick-listed cases of employees (n = 3044), drawn from the same random general population in western Sweden. Explanatory factors were self-rated 'Somatic and mental symptoms', 'Mental well-being', 'job strain', and 'physical work conditions' (i.e. heavy lifting and awkward work postures). Multiple logistic regression analyses were used.ResultsSomatic and mental symptoms, mental well-being, and job strain, could not explain the association between socioeconomic position and sickness absence in both women and men. However, physical work conditions explained the total association in women and much of this association in men. In men the gradient between Non-skilled manual OR 1.76 (1.24;2.48) and Skilled manual OR 1.59 (1.10;2.20), both in relation to Higher non-manual, remained unexplained.ConclusionsThe present study strengthens the scientific evidence that social differences in physical work conditions seem to comprise a key element of the social gradient in sickness absence, particularly in women. Future studies should try to identify further predictors for this gradient in men.
This cross-sectional study investigated if gender, education, and country of birth were associated with perceived need and unmet need for mental healthcare (i.e., refraining from seeking care, or perceiving care as insufficient when seeking it). Questionnaire and register data from 2008 were collected for 3987 individuals, aged 19–64 years, in a random population-based sample from western Sweden. Descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses were used. Men were less likely to perceive a need for care than were women, even after adjusting for mental well-being. Men were also less likely to seek care and perceiving care as sufficient. People with secondary education were less likely to seek care than those with university education. There were no statistically significant differences based on country of birth. The observed gender and education-based inequalities increases our understanding of where interventions can be implemented. These inequalities in unmet need for mental healthcare should be targeted by the healthcare system.
The presentation, pattern of acute illness, and incidence of learning difficulties are described in 63 (33 boys, 30 girls) children with salt wasting 21-hydroxylase deficiency, drawn from a cohort study of congenital adrenal hyperplasia in the South West Region of England between 1968 and 1988. Thirty boys presented with a salt losing crisis from birth whereas the other three boys presented between 2 and 14 months of age with failure to thrive and hyponatraemia. Diagnostic uncertainty led to 13 (43%) of 30 girls developing a salt losing crisis. Five girls were misassigned as boys at birth. There were four deaths in the group, two due to salt losing crisis, one to complications of prematurity possibly compounded by 21-hydroxylase deficiency, and one from heart failure probably related to an excess of steroids. Acute admissions were common, especially during the first year of life, with convulsions in 7% of admissions. The 9% incidence of hypoglycaemia was considered to be an underestimate as blood glucose was measured in only 56 (22%) of 254 admissions. No convulsions occurred in the 38 (15%) admissions where the parents had given intramuscular hydrocortisone before bringing the child to hospital. A high incidence of learning difficulties was found among the 59 surviving children (9/30 (30%) boys and 6/29 (21%) girls), and in only two children could any factor other than 21-hydroxylase deficiency be invoked. Analysis of the subgroup with learning difficulties indicated that they were more ill at presentation with a significantly higher incidence of hypoglycaemia, and that growth in the first year was significantly worse.It is concluded that congenital adrenal hyperplasia remains a formidable disorder with an appreciable mortality and morbidity. The high incidence of learning difficulties seen in salt wasting 21-hydroxylase deficiency needs further attention. A prospective study is indicated to examine the effect of neonatal screening on morbidity from congenital adrenal hyperplasia, particularly the intellectual impairment seen in this study.
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