Psychosocial consequences after screening of abdominal aortic aneurysm among 65 year old men

•The study suggested that few men diagnosed with AAA after screening reported severe psychosocial consequences and they were more likely to make lifestyle changes.•Half of the AAA cases stated that they feared rupture, but in general men did not regret participating in the population screening progr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of vascular nursing 2023-09, Vol.41 (3), p.95-102
Hauptverfasser: Broeren, Monica, Langenskiöld, Marcus, Pettersson, Monica E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The study suggested that few men diagnosed with AAA after screening reported severe psychosocial consequences and they were more likely to make lifestyle changes.•Half of the AAA cases stated that they feared rupture, but in general men did not regret participating in the population screening programme.•There is a need to ensure that men with screening-detected AAA get adequate personalized education in order to improve psychosocial well-being. In order to reduce the incidence of abdominal aortic aneurysm rupture and mortality, the Swedish Medical Council has introduced a national abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) screening program that offers ultrasound examination of 65-year-old men. Screening programmes of AAA may confer both benefits and harms. The study aim was to investigate the psychosocial consequences of AAA screening among men with screening-detected AAA as compared to men identified as AAA-negative at screening, using an AAA-specific questionnaire. This cross-sectional study investigated the psychosocial consequences of AAA screening measured with a condition-specific questionnaire. This study focused on the Experience of the Diagnosis and the Screening Procedure in terms of Anxiety, Sense of Dejection and Existential Values. One hundred and fifty-eight men with AAA (63%) and 275 with normal aorta size (55%) completed the diagnosis-specific questionnaire. Ninety-six percent of men with screening detected AAA did not regret the screening examination, the corresponding figure for controls being 99.6%. Seventy percent of AAA patients were surprised that something was wrong in their body. Some (85%) of men with AAA were current or previous smokers, about half of them (45%) felt guilty about it and 78% of the current smokers in the AAA group had considered stopping smoking. Both groups considered changing lifestyle, although at a higher rate (32%) among AAA cases than controls (20%), with differences both in intention to change their ways to exercise (p = 0.019) and food intake (p = 0.001). Intergroup differences were identified for the majority of items as captured by the questionnaire where men identified with AAA reported more negative psycho-social consequences for all evaluated items except for the items: Regret of the screening examination (p = 0.069) and feeling terrified (p = 0.10). Fifty-one percent of AAA cases stated that they feared rupture, and 12% were anxious about rupture during sexual activity whereas 57% were worried about rupture du
ISSN:1062-0303
1532-6578
DOI:10.1016/j.jvn.2023.05.004