Abstract
BackgroundThis exploratory study sought to establish the relationship between endometriosis-related pelvic pain, endometriosis symptom-frequency, and women’s subjective wellbeing (SWB).MethodsA purposive sample (N = 2061) of women with endometriosis aged between 18 and 62 years (M = 30.49 ± 7.45) completed an online questionnaire containing a measure of pelvic pain (Biberoglu & Behrman Scale; B&B), endometriosis symptom frequency, and an established measure of SWB (Personal Wellbeing Index: PWI).ResultsMean SWB total scores (58.35 ± 17.90) were considerably lower than those of women in the general population (western normative range = 70–80; mean = 76). On average, women reported moderate levels of pelvic pain (B&B mean = 5.96 ± 1.84), with a mean of 10.87 (± 4.81) endometriosis-related symptoms across the sample. Significant relationships were found between pelvic pain and SWB dimension and total scores (r’s = − 0.20 to − 0.43, all p’s < .001), and significant small to medium associations between symptom frequency and all but one of the dimensions of SWB (r’s = − 0.12 to − 0.23, all p’s < .007). In multivariate regression models accounting for age and delay in diagnosis, higher levels of pelvic pain were significantly associated with lower SWB scores across all eight dimensions of the PWI and total score (all p’s < .002). Greater symptom frequency was significantly associated with lower levels of SWB for the dimensions of health, future security, life as a whole, and total scores (all p’s < .002).ConclusionsSWB was lower in women with endometriosis than SWB in women from the general population, and endometriosis related symptoms and pelvic pain explain significant proportions of the unique variance in women’s SWB scores. Psychosocial support is needed for women dealing with endometriosis-related symptoms and pain in order to improve their wellbeing and quality of life.
Highlights
This exploratory study sought to establish the relationship between endometriosis-related pelvic pain, endometriosis symptom-frequency, and women’s subjective wellbeing (SWB)
Participants' SWB scores were below population normative ranges in all dimensions
Participants' health SWB was significantly lower than all other dimensions, and subjective safety was the highest rated dimension
Summary
This exploratory study sought to establish the relationship between endometriosis-related pelvic pain, endometriosis symptom-frequency, and women’s subjective wellbeing (SWB). Despite the potential for endometriosis-related symptoms to negatively affect the subjective wellbeing (SWB) of women, there is a paucity of research on SWB in women with endometriosis. The mental burden of managing the symptoms and associated pain of endometriosis should logically impact SWB, and SWB is a known predictor of health and mortality [9]. Research on this issue is important because of the high prevalence of endometriosis, low levels of SWB, and the known association between SWB and depression, anxiety, and suicide ideation [5,6,7]
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