Communication of health in experimentally sick men and women: A pilot study

•This experimental study assessed health communication in sick individuals.•Lipopolysaccharide-induced sickness symptoms were similar in men and women.•Experimentally induced sick individuals were more likely to moan and complain.•Sick men, but not women, highly increased their frequency of sighs or...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychoneuroendocrinology 2018-01, Vol.87, p.188-195
Hauptverfasser: Lasselin, Julie, Lekander, Mats, Paues-Göranson, Sofie, Olsson, Mats J, Axelsson, John
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•This experimental study assessed health communication in sick individuals.•Lipopolysaccharide-induced sickness symptoms were similar in men and women.•Experimentally induced sick individuals were more likely to moan and complain.•Sick men, but not women, highly increased their frequency of sighs or deep breaths.•Sickness-related variables did not predict sigh/deep breath frequency. The way people communicate their ill-health and the factors involved in ill-health communication remain poorly known. In the present study, we tested how men and women communicate their sickness and assessed whether sickness-related variables (i.e., body temperature, immune response, subjective sickness symptoms) predicted communicative behaviors. Twenty-two participants were filmed during experimentally induced sickness, triggered by lipopolysaccharide administration (2ng/kg body weight), and after placebo administration, in presence of female care providers. Two trained raters scored participants’ communicative behaviors (verbal complaints, moaning and sighs/deep breaths). The physiological and subjective sickness responses were similar in both sexes. Participants were more likely to moan and complain when sick, although the frequency of these behaviors remained low and no clear sex differences was observed. Nevertheless, frequency of sighs/deep breaths was increased amongst sick men but not in women. Sickness-related variables did not predict sigh/deep breath frequency. In this setting, sick men appear to display a lower threshold of expressing their malaise as compared to similarly sick women.
ISSN:0306-4530
1873-3360
1873-3360
DOI:10.1016/j.psyneuen.2017.10.024