Background: Studies have shown that women with vulvodynia are more psychologically distressed than women without vulvodynia. These studies, however, have not effectively established temporal associations between diagnosed psychiatric disorders and vulvodynia. Methods: The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders (SCID) was administered to 240 casecontrol pairs of women with and without vulvodynia. Interviews established age at first onset of diagnosed mood and anxiety disorder. Age information was used to determine whether the first episode of mood and/or anxiety was antecedent or subsequent to the first onset of vulvodynia symptoms. Conditional logistic regressions tested whether antecedent depression or anxiety was more likely among women with or without vulvodynia. Cox proportional hazards modeling was then used to estimate risk of subsequent new or recurrent onset of mood or anxiety disorder. Results: After adjusting for education, race, age at menarche, age at first tampon use, and age at first sexual intercourse, odds of vulvodynia were four-times more likely among women with antecedent mood or anxiety compared to women without (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.1-7.5). Vulvodynia was associated with new or recurrent onset of mood or anxiety disorder after adjustment (hazard ratio [HR] 1.7, 95% CI 1.1-2.6) and did not significantly change after including history of mood or anxiety disorder before the onset of vulvodynia or reference age of controls in the models. Conclusions: This is the first community-based epidemiologic study demonstrating that DSM-IV-diagnosed antecedent depression and anxiety disorders influence the risk of vulvodynia and that vulvodynia increases the risk of both new and recurrent onset of psychopathology.
This study sought to study consumption patterns of gay-oriented sexually explicit media (SEM) by men who have sex with men (MSM); and to investigate a hypothesized relationship between gay SEM consumption and HIV risk behavior. Participants were 1391 MSM living in the US, recruited online to complete a SEM consumption and sexual risk survey. Almost all (98.5%) reported some gay SEM exposure over the last 90 days. While 41% reported a preference to watch actors perform anal sex without condoms (termed “bareback SEM”), 17% preferred to actors perform anal sex with condoms (termed “safer sex SEM”) and 42% reported no preference. Overall SEM consumption was not associated with HIV risk; however participants who watched more bareback SEM reported significantly greater odds of engaging in risk behavior. The results suggest that a preference for bareback SEM is associated with engaging in risk behavior. More research to understand how MSM develop and maintain preferences in viewing SEM, and to identify new ways to use SEM in HIV prevention, is recommended.
This study adds to the pediatric literature documenting an association between cardiovascular reactivity to stress and subsequent risk for hypertension. It is the first to show that impedance-derived measures of myocardial function during stress are related to future blood pressure levels.
This study examined whether coping moderated the impact of community violence exposure (CVE) on violent behavior among 285 urban African American and Latino adolescent males assessed annually across five years. Composites indicating overall CVE (having knowledge of others' victimization, witnessing violence, direct victimization) and approach to coping with CVE were created by averaging across years 1-3 (Time 1; mean ages 14-16). Adolescents classified as coping effectively tended to respond to CVE in beneficial ways (e.g., developing long-term solutions, engaging in positive reappraisal). Violent behavior was examined across years 1-3 (Time 1) and years 4-5 (Time 2; mean ages 18-19). CVE was longitudinally associated with greater violent behavior, adjusting for Time 1 levels of violent behavior. This association was significant only among adolescents with less effective coping strategies. Interventions targeting the enhancement of coping skills may be an effective method of reducing the impact of CVE on adolescent violent behavior.
Adolescents experience a range of social and emotional consequences after having sex. Our findings have implications for clinical practice and public health campaigns targeted toward youth.
As predicted, our results suggest that having few assets and being black were independently related to life events exposure. Correlations between socioeconomic indices were not so high as to suggest redundancy, and different SES indicators were of importance in predicting exposure to different types of life events.
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