TY - JOUR
T1 - Financial Strain Across 25 years and Men’s Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms
T2 - A Life Course Perspective
AU - Brady, Sonya S.
AU - Arguedas, Andrés
AU - Huling, Jared D.
AU - Hellemann, Gerhard
AU - Lewis, Cora E.
AU - Jacobs, David R.
AU - Fok, Cynthia S.
AU - Van Den Eeden, Stephen K.
AU - Markland, Alayne D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/3/1
Y1 - 2025/3/1
N2 - This research utilizes Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) cohort study data to examine whether financial strain is associated with subsequent lower urinary tract symptoms among men and whether healthcare barriers, health risk behaviors, and comorbid conditions explain this association. CARDIA recruited Black and White participants aged 18 to 30 years at baseline (1985–1986) from four United States cities. The analytic sample was comprised of men with complete data for analyses involving financial strain trajectories across 7 assessments (n = 602) and mediation tests of data collected at 4 assessments (n = 634). The outcome variable, assessed when the mean age of men was 50 years, was the American Urologic Association Symptom Index score, recoded into four symptom categories: none (6.3%); mild (62.6%), moderate (28.5%), and severe (2.6%). Symptom category was regressed on financial strain variables, adjusting for age, race, education, and self-reported benign prostatic hyperplasia. Regression analyses and structural equation modeling tested potential mediators. Compared to not being financially strained across early and midlife adulthood, experiencing more than one shift in financial strain was associated with 84% greater odds (95% confidence interval [1.24, 2.75]) of being categorized into a worse symptom category. Structural equation modeling showed that both difficulty receiving healthcare and depressive symptoms explained an association between difficulty paying for medical care and worse symptoms. Additional research is needed to confirm findings and examine other mechanisms that may further explain associations between financial strain and symptoms, such as stress responses. Accumulated evidence may inform future prevention interventions, including integrated healthcare approaches.
AB - This research utilizes Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) cohort study data to examine whether financial strain is associated with subsequent lower urinary tract symptoms among men and whether healthcare barriers, health risk behaviors, and comorbid conditions explain this association. CARDIA recruited Black and White participants aged 18 to 30 years at baseline (1985–1986) from four United States cities. The analytic sample was comprised of men with complete data for analyses involving financial strain trajectories across 7 assessments (n = 602) and mediation tests of data collected at 4 assessments (n = 634). The outcome variable, assessed when the mean age of men was 50 years, was the American Urologic Association Symptom Index score, recoded into four symptom categories: none (6.3%); mild (62.6%), moderate (28.5%), and severe (2.6%). Symptom category was regressed on financial strain variables, adjusting for age, race, education, and self-reported benign prostatic hyperplasia. Regression analyses and structural equation modeling tested potential mediators. Compared to not being financially strained across early and midlife adulthood, experiencing more than one shift in financial strain was associated with 84% greater odds (95% confidence interval [1.24, 2.75]) of being categorized into a worse symptom category. Structural equation modeling showed that both difficulty receiving healthcare and depressive symptoms explained an association between difficulty paying for medical care and worse symptoms. Additional research is needed to confirm findings and examine other mechanisms that may further explain associations between financial strain and symptoms, such as stress responses. Accumulated evidence may inform future prevention interventions, including integrated healthcare approaches.
KW - access to health care
KW - depression
KW - health care utilization
KW - lower urinary tract symptoms
KW - men
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U2 - 10.1177/15579883251330117
DO - 10.1177/15579883251330117
M3 - Article
C2 - 40162920
AN - SCOPUS:105002245465
SN - 1557-9883
VL - 19
JO - American Journal of Men's Health
JF - American Journal of Men's Health
IS - 2
ER -