Dysmenorrhea and the clinical encounter: testing a conceptual model of physician-patient interactions among emerging adults
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by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-12
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This study examined physician-patient interactions among emerging adults with dysmenorrhea, finding that perceived effective communication and less pain invalidation were linked to lower symptom severity via menstrual sensitivity.
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by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-12
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The study examined how perceived physician communication, pain invalidation, trust, treatment adherence, menstrual sensitivity, and dysmenorrhea symptom severity relate in Canadian and American emerging adults aged 18–21 with dysmenorrhea, using partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) on online survey data (n = 362; a smaller subset with a physician treatment plan n = 279 was also analyzed). Across both models, more effective physician communication and less perceived pain invalidation were associated with lower dysmenorrhea symptom severity via menstrual sensitivity. In the subset with a physician treatment plan, communication and pain invalidation also related to higher treatment adherence through greater trust, but trust and adherence were not associated with dysmenorrhea symptom severity. The paper is limited by its reliance on cross-sectional self-report data and does not examine other clinical encounter elements beyond those modeled. This paper does not explicitly discuss endometriosis or adenomyosis; it was included in the corpus via a keyword match related to dysmenorrhea and pelvic pain.
Abstract
Dysmenorrhea affects as much as 85% of female youth in Canada and the United States and can negatively impact academic performance, overall health, and mental well-being. The physician-patient relationship can play an important role in supporting patients with pain conditions, such as dysmenorrhea. Through effective communication, trust, and validation, physician-patient interactions can empower pain patients, potentially improving pain outcomes. To date, no studies have quantitatively examined the impact of physician-patient interactions on youth's experiences of dysmenorrhea. Therefore, our aim was to explore the relationships among perceived physician communication, pain invalidation, trust in the physician, treatment adherence, menstrual sensitivity, and dysmenorrhea symptom severity among emerging adults (EA) and test a conceptual model of potential interactions using partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM). The online survey was administered to Canadian and American EA aged 18 to 21 ( Mage = 19.4, SD = 1.1) years with dysmenorrhea. Two models were tested using PLS-SEM: model A only included participants who had received a treatment plan from their physician (n = 279) and model B included the full data set (N = 362). In both models, the perception of more effective physician communication and reduced pain invalidation were related to lower dysmenorrhea symptom severity through menstrual sensitivity. In model A, better physician communication and lower pain invalidation were also associated with higher reported treatment adherence by trust in the physician; however, neither treatment adherence nor trust in the physician were associated with dysmenorrhea symptom severity. Future research should include additional elements within the clinical encounter and further refine the model.
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Dysmenorrhea affects as much as 85% of female youth in Canada and the United States and can negatively impact academic performance, overall health, and mental well-being. The physician–patient relationship can play an important role in supporting patients with pain conditions, such as dysmenorrhea. Through effective communication, trust, and validation, physician–patient interactions can empower pain patients, potentially improving pain outcomes. To date, no studies have quantitatively examined the impact of physician–patient interactions on youth's experiences of dysmenorrhea. Therefore, our aim was to explore the relationships among perceived physician communication, pain invalidation, trust in the physician, treatment adherence, menstrual sensitivity, and dysmenorrhea symptom severity among emerging adults (EA) and test a conceptual model of potential interactions using partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM). The online survey was administered to Canadian and American EA aged 18 to 21 (Mage = 19.4, SD = 1.1) years with dysmenorrhea. Two models were tested using PLS-SEM: model A only included participants who had received a treatment plan from their physician (n = 279) and model B included the full data set (N = 362). In both models, the perception of more effective physician communication and reduced pain invalidation were related to lower dysmenorrhea symptom severity through menstrual sensitivity. In model A, better physician communication and lower pain invalidation were also associated with higher reported treatment adherence by trust in the physician; however, neither treatment adherence nor trust in the physician were associated with dysmenorrhea symptom severity. Future research should include additional elements within the clinical encounter and further refine the model.
Dysmenorrhea and the clinical encounter: testing a conceptual model of physician–patient interactions among emerging adults
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Among youth with dysmenorrhea seeking help for their menstrual pain, physician communication, menstrual sensitivity, and pain invalidation seem to influence pain outcomes.
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Condition tags
dysmenorrhea
MeSH descriptors
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
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- last seen: 2026-06-27T06:13:33.955442+00:00
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- last seen: 2026-06-27T06:10:34.424804+00:00
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