Quantifying the Impact of Dysmenorrhea Symptoms on Quality-of-Life and Access to Oral Contraceptives by Income

# Background Dysmenorrhea, or painful menstrual periods, is one of the most common gynecological complaints. Most reports of uterine contractions range between moderate to severe pain, and patients often elect to cope with their discomfort without assistance from a physician. In the process, women...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rhea Choksey, Rohan K. Mangal, Thor S. Stead, Terrika Jones, Rosa Flores, Latha Ganti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Medical Publishing 2023-05-01
Series:Health Psychology Research
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.52965/001c.74120
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1825196973264732160
author Rhea Choksey
Rohan K. Mangal
Thor S. Stead
Terrika Jones
Rosa Flores
Latha Ganti
author_facet Rhea Choksey
Rohan K. Mangal
Thor S. Stead
Terrika Jones
Rosa Flores
Latha Ganti
author_sort Rhea Choksey
collection DOAJ
description # Background Dysmenorrhea, or painful menstrual periods, is one of the most common gynecological complaints. Most reports of uterine contractions range between moderate to severe pain, and patients often elect to cope with their discomfort without assistance from a physician. In the process, women experiencing dysmenorrhea are more likely to report absenteeism from work and school. # Objectives This study measures the reported impact of dysmenorrhea on patients' lives and elucidates a relationship between income and access to oral contraceptives. # Methods Two hundred women completed a survey about their symptoms, level of pain, treatments, and the extent to which dysmenorrhea affected day-to-day obligations. Most questions were multiple-choice while others permitted several answer selections or were free response. The data was analyzed using JMP statistical software. # Results Eighty-four percent of respondents reported moderate to severe pain during menstruation. This discomfort has caused 65.5% of the cohort to miss work and 68% to avoid participating in social gatherings. Pain relief medications are most often used as treatment - 143 respondents took ibuprofen, 93 took acetaminophen, and 51 took naproxen. 29.5% of respondents are prescribed birth control for cramps and blood flow. Income (p = 0.049), age (p = 0.002), and education (p = 0.002) were significant predictors for oral contraceptive pill (OCP) use. The lowest income groups were found to use OCPs at less than half the rate as the highest income respondents. # Conclusion Dysmenorrhea affected most participants in the cohort with an impact that extends beyond professional obligations. Income was found to be positively correlated with increased OCP use, whereas education level was inversely correlated. Clinicians should consider how patients' backgrounds influence their access to OCP options. An improvement on this study's findings would be to establish a causal relationship between these demographic factors and access to OCPs.
format Article
id doaj-art-e45a36ec2a52439ab04f09033df6e75b
institution Kabale University
issn 2420-8124
language English
publishDate 2023-05-01
publisher Open Medical Publishing
record_format Article
series Health Psychology Research
spelling doaj-art-e45a36ec2a52439ab04f09033df6e75b2025-02-11T20:30:30ZengOpen Medical PublishingHealth Psychology Research2420-81242023-05-0111Quantifying the Impact of Dysmenorrhea Symptoms on Quality-of-Life and Access to Oral Contraceptives by IncomeRhea ChokseyRohan K. MangalThor S. SteadTerrika JonesRosa FloresLatha Ganti# Background Dysmenorrhea, or painful menstrual periods, is one of the most common gynecological complaints. Most reports of uterine contractions range between moderate to severe pain, and patients often elect to cope with their discomfort without assistance from a physician. In the process, women experiencing dysmenorrhea are more likely to report absenteeism from work and school. # Objectives This study measures the reported impact of dysmenorrhea on patients' lives and elucidates a relationship between income and access to oral contraceptives. # Methods Two hundred women completed a survey about their symptoms, level of pain, treatments, and the extent to which dysmenorrhea affected day-to-day obligations. Most questions were multiple-choice while others permitted several answer selections or were free response. The data was analyzed using JMP statistical software. # Results Eighty-four percent of respondents reported moderate to severe pain during menstruation. This discomfort has caused 65.5% of the cohort to miss work and 68% to avoid participating in social gatherings. Pain relief medications are most often used as treatment - 143 respondents took ibuprofen, 93 took acetaminophen, and 51 took naproxen. 29.5% of respondents are prescribed birth control for cramps and blood flow. Income (p = 0.049), age (p = 0.002), and education (p = 0.002) were significant predictors for oral contraceptive pill (OCP) use. The lowest income groups were found to use OCPs at less than half the rate as the highest income respondents. # Conclusion Dysmenorrhea affected most participants in the cohort with an impact that extends beyond professional obligations. Income was found to be positively correlated with increased OCP use, whereas education level was inversely correlated. Clinicians should consider how patients' backgrounds influence their access to OCP options. An improvement on this study's findings would be to establish a causal relationship between these demographic factors and access to OCPs.https://doi.org/10.52965/001c.74120
spellingShingle Rhea Choksey
Rohan K. Mangal
Thor S. Stead
Terrika Jones
Rosa Flores
Latha Ganti
Quantifying the Impact of Dysmenorrhea Symptoms on Quality-of-Life and Access to Oral Contraceptives by Income
Health Psychology Research
title Quantifying the Impact of Dysmenorrhea Symptoms on Quality-of-Life and Access to Oral Contraceptives by Income
title_full Quantifying the Impact of Dysmenorrhea Symptoms on Quality-of-Life and Access to Oral Contraceptives by Income
title_fullStr Quantifying the Impact of Dysmenorrhea Symptoms on Quality-of-Life and Access to Oral Contraceptives by Income
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying the Impact of Dysmenorrhea Symptoms on Quality-of-Life and Access to Oral Contraceptives by Income
title_short Quantifying the Impact of Dysmenorrhea Symptoms on Quality-of-Life and Access to Oral Contraceptives by Income
title_sort quantifying the impact of dysmenorrhea symptoms on quality of life and access to oral contraceptives by income
url https://doi.org/10.52965/001c.74120
work_keys_str_mv AT rheachoksey quantifyingtheimpactofdysmenorrheasymptomsonqualityoflifeandaccesstooralcontraceptivesbyincome
AT rohankmangal quantifyingtheimpactofdysmenorrheasymptomsonqualityoflifeandaccesstooralcontraceptivesbyincome
AT thorsstead quantifyingtheimpactofdysmenorrheasymptomsonqualityoflifeandaccesstooralcontraceptivesbyincome
AT terrikajones quantifyingtheimpactofdysmenorrheasymptomsonqualityoflifeandaccesstooralcontraceptivesbyincome
AT rosaflores quantifyingtheimpactofdysmenorrheasymptomsonqualityoflifeandaccesstooralcontraceptivesbyincome
AT lathaganti quantifyingtheimpactofdysmenorrheasymptomsonqualityoflifeandaccesstooralcontraceptivesbyincome