Publication | Open Access
Low Urinary Tract. Lower urinary tract symptoms in men: self‐perceptions and the concept of bother
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2005
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The findings suggest that men attempt to preserve a sense of a relatively youthful and intact 'self' in the face of advancing years and a progressive disease that was viewed as being associated with old age. Overall, these men had a reasonably secure self-image and they deployed a range of cognitive strategies to maintain this. Bother appears to be a combination of symptom severity, psychological distress, negative evaluations of the condition and beliefs about the reactions of others. Reducing anxiety and challenging negative stereotypes and expectations that others would view them negatively if their problems were known might reduce bother. Attending to these factors could enable watchful waiting to be optimized by reducing bother. Trials to evaluate interventions drawing on these principles would be valuable.
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