Abstract

ObjectivesAn earlier study found that mental health partially mediates the relationship between lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) severity and health-related quality of life (HRQOL). In other words, LUTS adversely affects mental health, which in turn adversely affects HRQOL. A major limitation of the previous study was its cross-sectional design. The aim of this study is to evaluate whether changes in mental health mediated the association between changes in the severity of LUTS and changes in HRQOL over 24 months by using Baron and Kenny’s regression procedure and Preacher and Hayes’s bootstrapping method.ResultsWe found that changes in mental health were a mediator in the relationship between the change of LUTS severity and the change of LUTS-specific HRQOL. Changes in LUTS severity lead to changes in mental health, which in turn affects the change of LUTS-specific HRQOL. It was observed however that changes in mental health did not mediate the relationship between the change of LUTS severity and the change of the physical aspects of generic HRQOL. These findings suggest that in order to optimize LUTS-specific HRQOL, both LUTS severity and mental health may need to be addressed concurrently.

Highlights

  • Lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) are not a major cause of mortality, they are highly prevalent chronic conditions [1] which negatively affects mental health [2, 3] and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) [4]

  • We found that changes in mental health were a mediator in the relationship between the change of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) severity and the change of LUTS-specific HRQOL

  • It was observed that changes in mental health did not mediate the relationship between the change of LUTS severity and the change of the physical aspects of generic HRQOL

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Summary

Introduction

Lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) are not a major cause of mortality, they are highly prevalent chronic conditions [1] which negatively affects mental health [2, 3] and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) [4]. Mental health as a mediator in the relationship between symptom severity and HRQOL A mediation model can be used to explain the mechanism that underlies an observed relationship between. A previous study found that mental health is a mediating factor in the relationship between LUTS severity and HRQOL. LUTS severity affects mental health, which in turn impairs HRQOL [7]. This study aims to evaluate if changes in mental health mediate the relationship between change in LUTS severity and change in HRQOL using longitudinal data.

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