| Literature DB >> 12618530 |
Gudrun Schneider1, Michael Wachter, Georg Driesch, Andreas Kruse, Hans-Georg Nehen, Gereon Heuft.
Abstract
The authors examined the correlation of subjective body complaints (measured by the Giessen Subjective Complaints List) with sociodemographic data, objective health measures, measures of subjective well-being, and clinicians' ratings of somatization and psychological impairment in 251 cognitively unimpaired general hospital inpatients aged >/=60 years. The level of subjective body complaints correlated most highly with self-assessed life satisfaction and age-related changes and with the clinicians' rating of somatization. The results suggest that the level of subjective body complaints is determined by subjective well-being rather than by objective health measures, and thus subjective body complaints may be an indicator of somatization in elderly inpatients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12618530 DOI: 10.1176/appi.psy.44.2.91
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychosomatics ISSN: 0033-3182 Impact factor: 2.386