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Frequency of Irritable Bowel Syndrome, Perceived Stress, and Mental Health Among Men

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KMID : 0388520120240010011
ÀÓ¼öÁø ( Lim Soo-Jin ) - ÀÌÈ­¿©ÀÚ´ëÇб³ °£È£Çаú

±Ç½Ã³» ( Kwon Shi-Nae ) - ÀÌ´ë¸ñµ¿º´¿ø °£È£ºÎ
¹ÚÈ¿Á¤ ( Park Hyo-Jung ) - ÀÌÈ­¿©ÀÚ´ëÇб³ °£È£°úÇкÎ

Abstract

Purpose: This study was performed to examine the frequency of irritable bowel syndrome(IBS), perceived stress, and mental health among men. Methods: This study conducted a survey to collect data on 385 men. The measurements included the Rome III criteria, the Global Assessment Recent Stress and symptom check list 90R(SCL-90R to evaluate psychological distress). Data were analyzed using IBM SPSS Statistics 19.0 program by frequency, ¥ö©÷-test, t-test, and ANOVA. Results: The frequency of IBS in men was 17.1%. Thirty-five men(53.0%) had mixed constipation and diarrhea subtype of IBS. Compared to the men without IBS, those with IBS reported significantly higher scores on GARS, all subscales of GARS, SCL-90R, all subscales of SCL-90R. No significant differences were observed among stress, mental health, and the IBS subtypes. Conclusion: Nursing interventions targeting men with IBS should be developed in order to reduce the associated stress and psychological distress.
KeyWords
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Irritable bowel syndrome, Stress, Mental health
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