1.Psychometric Evaluation of Uterine Cervical Cancer Screening Embarrassment Questionnaire among Korean Women: Complementary Use of Rasch Model.
Eun Jung CHO ; Bok Yae CHUNG ; Kwan LEE ; Nathan S CONSEDINE ; Won Kee LEE
Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing 2011;17(5):463-473
PURPOSE: Cervical cancer can be prevented by regular cervical screening. Embarrassment has been reported as one important barrier to cervical screening uptake. The absence of appropriate instrumentation, however, has limited our understanding of the links between embarrassment and health care outcomes. The purpose of this study was to evaluate psychometric attributes of the uterine cervical cancer screening embarrassment questionnaire. METHODS: A convenience sample for field study was recruited from four gynecological clinics in Gyeongju, Korea. Within a cross-sectional descriptive design, 339 women who had cervical screening completed self-administered measures of embarrassment including a visual analogue, general medical embarrassment, dispositional embarrassment, and Pap smear related negative emotion. RESULTS: Rasch analysis of items demonstrated the evidence of one-dimensional construct and good 7-point rating scales functioning. Factor analysis revealed that uterine cervical cancer screening embarrassment was comprised of two domains-bodily manifestations and perceiving an undesirable social face. Construct validity was demonstrated by a high subscale-to-subscale correlation. Convergent and discriminant validity was evidenced by significant correlations with a 100 mm VAS scale, general medical embarrassment, and Pap smear related negative emotion. Known-group validity was established by comparing women with high versus low trait embarrassment. Both two sub-scales and overall scale demonstrated good internal reliability. CONCLUSION: The Uterine uterine cervical cancer screening questionnaire is a reliable and valid instrument suited to assessing the manifestations of embarrassment during screening. The use of instrument can be extended to understand the client's embarrassment undergoing health examinations which require the exposure of their private parts.
Delivery of Health Care
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Early Detection of Cancer
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Female
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Humans
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Korea
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Mass Screening
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Psychometrics
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Surveys and Questionnaires
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Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
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Weights and Measures
2.Limb muscle hemodynamics and arterial distensibility depend on atmospheric pressure in hypertensive men.
Vladimir N MELNIKOV ; Sergey G KRIVOSCHEKOV ; Tamara G KOMLYAGINA ; Svetlana Y RECHKINA ; Nathan S CONSEDINE
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2013;26(4):284-294
OBJECTIVETo verify whether peripheral blood circulation and arterial wall distensibility are influenced by atmospheric pressure (AtPr) and to examine if their association is dependent on age and/or sex.
METHODSAssociations among natural AtPr levels (on the examination day as well as 1 and 2 days prior), limb muscle hemodynamics, and distensibility of conduit arteries were retrospectively examined in an observational study of 276 untreated patients with primary moderate hypertension (mean age 56.4 years, 194 men). Forearm and calf circulations at rest and 3 min after ischemia were measured by venous occlusion plethysmography. Compliance of the brachial and shank arteries was assessed by oscillometry.
RESULTSAfter adjustment for age, degree of hypertension, and season, correlation and multiple regression analyses revealed a season-independent but age-dependent direct correlation between the stiffness of limb arteries and AtPr levels on the examination day in men, but not women. The association weakened with the degree of hypertension, disappeared with age, and was more evident in the arms than in the legs.
CONCLUSIONParameters of arterial wall distensibility in adult hypertensive men are susceptible to AtPr changes within the usually observed limits (730-770 mmHg). It is proposed that reduction of arterial wall barometric responsiveness in women and aging men is a likely mechanism underlying their meteosensitivity.
Adult ; Aged ; Aging ; physiology ; Atmospheric Pressure ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Extremities ; blood supply ; Female ; Hemodynamics ; Humans ; Hypertension ; physiopathology ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Muscle, Skeletal ; blood supply ; Retrospective Studies ; Seasons ; Sex Characteristics ; Vascular Stiffness