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Urologic Oncology Jun 2024This review examines the impact of masculinity stigma on the diagnosis and treatment of metastatic prostate cancer, particularly in Latin America. It aims to provide... (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
This review examines the impact of masculinity stigma on the diagnosis and treatment of metastatic prostate cancer, particularly in Latin America. It aims to provide insights into the influence of masculinity stigma on patient outcomes and inform strategies to address this issue.
METHODS
A comprehensive search was conducted in electronic databases (PubMed, PsycINFO, CINAHL and LILACS) using relevant keywords and controlled vocabulary related to metastatic prostate cancer, masculinity, stigma, diagnosis, and treatment up to April 2023. The search strategy was developed in consultation with a medical librarian to ensure its comprehensiveness. Thirty-three studies that investigate the role of masculinity stigma in the diagnosis and treatment of metastatic prostate cancer were included.
RESULTS
Our findings highlight the unique sociocultural influences in Latin America that shape prostate cancer stigma. It emphasizes the impact of cultural beliefs, gender norms, and social expectations on stigma. Notions of masculinity, such as strength and invulnerability, contribute to the stigmatization of prostate cancer. Machismo culture and religious/spiritual beliefs further compound the challenges and hinder open communication about the disease. Cultural taboos, limited awareness, and misconceptions perpetuate the stigma.
CONCLUSIONS
These sociocultural factors shape the experiences and challenges faced by individuals with and at risk of prostate cancer in Latin America.
PubMed: 38866641
DOI: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2024.05.001 -
International Journal of Surgery Case... Jul 2024Adrenocortical tumors (ACTs) are rare endocrine neoplasms in children, with functional ACTs being more prevalent than non-functional types. Clinical manifestations...
INTRODUCTION
Adrenocortical tumors (ACTs) are rare endocrine neoplasms in children, with functional ACTs being more prevalent than non-functional types. Clinical manifestations typically include virilization, Cushing's syndrome, and hyperaldosteronism. Surgical intervention is the primary treatment for ACTs, with a significant risk of recurrence in adrenocortical carcinoma even after complete resection.
PRESENTATION OF CASE
This case presentation describes a 3.5-year-old female with generalized hirsutism and clitoral hypertrophy, leading to the discovery of a left adrenal tumor. The child underwent adrenalectomy, revealing a benign adrenal cortical adenoma. Unfortunately, due to loss of follow-up, the child later presented with pulmonary metastases and passed away, preventing further investigation into the source of metastases.
DISCUSSION
Adrenocortical tumors are uncommon in children, with the classification of ACTs into adenomas and carcinomas. To our knowledge, this is the third case of an adrenocortical tumor in a child in Syria. We highlight the challenges in managing pediatric ACTs and emphasize the importance of timely intervention and close monitoring to improve outcomes. Regular follow-up is crucial to detect complications early and optimize treatment strategies, especially considering the unpredictable behavior of these tumors.
CONCLUSION
This case confirms that distinguishing between adrenocortical adenoma and carcinoma can be challenging even histologically. Therefore, it is necessary to follow up after treating each case of adenoma in a child to prevent major complications.
PubMed: 38852562
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijscr.2024.109878 -
Journal of Occupational Medicine and... Jun 2024In previous studies a moderator effect of management position could be found between Person-environment fit of masculinity, and burnout. Present study goals are to...
BACKGROUND
In previous studies a moderator effect of management position could be found between Person-environment fit of masculinity, and burnout. Present study goals are to analyze previous fundings of the importance of the individual gender-role in relation to the work environment in more detail.
METHODS
In this cross sectional explanative study, an online survey took place using Gender Role Orientation Scale (GTS +) by Altstötter-Gleich and DearEmployee-Survey by Wiedemann et al. The sample consists of 891 participants-516 female (58%), 373 male (42%), among those 277 executives (32%) and 594 participants without managerial responsibility (68%), age 17-70 years (M = 29.86; S = 7.67). Four groups were divided according to P-E fit in femininity and P-E fit in masculinity, this enabled a more precise distinction between the participants. The proportions of executives were determined, and compared in each group by a -Test Hierarchical linear regression models predicting burnout and proving moderator effects of managerial position were calculated for each group.
RESULTS
The proportions of executives were the highest in the two groups with participants, who had a higher individual masculinity compared to their work environment. A moderator effect of managerial position between P-E fit in masculinity and burnout was found in group "Indifferent" (participants with lower feminity and masculinity compared with work environment). With a worse P-E fit in masculinity burnout values rise for individuals with no managerial position. On the other hand, among leaders burnout values decrease a worse P-E fit in masculinity.
CONCLUSIONS
People with a high individual masculinity compared to work environment tend more to be selected as managers, regardless of the individual characteristics of femininity, which may generally lead to a highly masculine and less feminine leadership and corporate culture. This culture could increase burnout risk for people with low individual masculinity and high feminity scores compared to work environment as well as for persons with low individual masculinity and feminity compared to work environment, especially if they are not in a managerial position.
PubMed: 38849819
DOI: 10.1186/s12995-024-00403-y -
Archives of Sexual Behavior Jun 2024This linkage study examined the prevalence of traditional gender expressions in the textual and visual profile cues on mobile dating applications (MDA)...
This linkage study examined the prevalence of traditional gender expressions in the textual and visual profile cues on mobile dating applications (MDA) (nbiographies = 396, npictures = 1352) of 396 young adults' (Mage = 22.39 years, SD = 2.86, 73% women) with attention to users' gender, sexual orientation, and platform type. For 184 users (Mage = 22.10 years, SD = 2.91, 75% women) media content data were linked to self-report survey data. Results showed that individuals aligned their self-presentations with traditional gender roles and expectations, and this link depended on their gender. No significant differences according to individuals' sexual orientation or platform type were found. Individuals' (hyper-) gender orientation also related to engagement in traditional gender expressions. Specifically, women with a stronger feminine gender orientation expressed more traditional femininity in their MDA profiles. For men, no significant associations between (aspects of) a masculine gender orientation and expressing traditional masculinity in their MDA profiles were found. Future research should further disentangle selective gendered self-presentations.
Topics: Humans; Female; Male; Young Adult; Adult; Mobile Applications; Gender Role; Sexual Behavior; Masculinity; Femininity; Gender Identity; Interpersonal Relations; Courtship
PubMed: 38844742
DOI: 10.1007/s10508-024-02884-8 -
Frontiers in Endocrinology 2024The term 'differences of sex development' (DSD) refers to a group of congenital conditions that are associated with atypical development of chromosomal, gonadal, and/or... (Review)
Review
46,XX Differences of Sex Development outside congenital adrenal hyperplasia: pathogenesis, clinical aspects, puberty, sex hormone replacement therapy and fertility outcomes.
The term 'differences of sex development' (DSD) refers to a group of congenital conditions that are associated with atypical development of chromosomal, gonadal, and/or anatomical sex. DSD in individuals with a 46,XX karyotype can occur due to fetal or postnatal exposure to elevated amount of androgens or maldevelopment of internal genitalia. Clinical phenotype could be quite variable and for this reason these conditions could be diagnosed at birth, in newborns with atypical genitalia, but also even later in life, due to progressive virilization during adolescence, or pubertal delay. Understand the physiological development and the molecular bases of gonadal and adrenal structures is crucial to determine the diagnosis and best management and treatment for these patients. The most common cause of DSD in 46,XX newborns is congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency, determining primary adrenal insufficiency and androgen excess. In this review we will focus on the other rare causes of 46,XX DSD, outside CAH, summarizing the most relevant data on genetic, clinical aspects, puberty and fertility outcomes of these rare diseases.
Topics: Humans; Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital; Puberty; Hormone Replacement Therapy; Fertility; Female; Male; Disorders of Sex Development; Sexual Development
PubMed: 38841305
DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2024.1402579 -
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics Dec 2024The contribution of vaccination to global health, especially in low-middle-income countries is one of the achievements in global governance of modern medicine, averting...
The contribution of vaccination to global health, especially in low-middle-income countries is one of the achievements in global governance of modern medicine, averting 2-3 million child deaths annually. However, in Nigeria, vaccine-preventable-diseases still account for one-in-eight child deaths before their fifth-year birthday. Nigeria is one of the ten countries where 4.3 million children under five are without complete immunization. Therefore, the goal of this contribution is to shed light on the reasons to set a foundation for future interventions. To conduct focus groups, a simplified quota sampling approach was used to select mothers of children 0-12 months old in four geographical clusters of Nigeria. An interview guide developed from the 5C psychological antecedence model was used (assessing confidence, complacency, calculation, constraints, collective responsibility); two concepts were added that had proved meaningful in previous work (religion and masculinity). The data were analyzed using a meta-aggregation approach. The sample was relatively positive toward vaccination. Still, mothers reported low trust in vaccine safety and the healthcare system (confidence). Yet, they had great interest in seeking additional information (calculation), difficulties in prioritizing vaccination over other equally competing priorities (constraints) and were aware that vaccination translates into overall community wellbeing (collective responsibility). They had a bias toward God as ultimate giver of good health (religion) and their husbands played a dominant role in vaccination decision-making (masculinity). Mothers perceived their children vulnerable to disease outbreaks, hence, motivated vaccination (complacency). The study provided a useful qualitative tool for understanding mothers' vaccination decision-making in low resources settings.
Topics: Humans; Nigeria; Mothers; Female; Infant; Vaccination; Decision Making; Adult; Infant, Newborn; Qualitative Research; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; Young Adult; Focus Groups; Male; Patient Acceptance of Health Care; Vaccines
PubMed: 38839600
DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2024.2355709 -
Ecology of Food and Nutrition 2024Conformity to masculinity ideology predicts men's meat consumption and willingness to reduce their meat intake, but it is unknown which specific masculine norms account...
Conformity to masculinity ideology predicts men's meat consumption and willingness to reduce their meat intake, but it is unknown which specific masculine norms account for these relationships. This study investigated which traditional and non-traditional masculine norms predict meat consumption, red and processed meat consumption, and willingness to reduce meat consumption in 557 Australian and English males. Men who support the use of physical violence and place high importance on sex ate more meat. Willingness to reduce was highest among men with gender egalitarian views. Targeting these specific masculine norms may be important for mitigating men's overconsumption of meat.
Topics: Humans; Male; Masculinity; Adult; Young Adult; Australia; Meat; Middle Aged; Diet; Adolescent; Food Preferences
PubMed: 38835162
DOI: 10.1080/03670244.2024.2361818 -
Archives of Sexual Behavior Jul 2024From the mid-seventeenth century, resorption of a testicular "ferment" and resorption of some part of the semen constituted reputable accounts of secondary sexual...
From the mid-seventeenth century, resorption of a testicular "ferment" and resorption of some part of the semen constituted reputable accounts of secondary sexual characteristics. Only in the early twentieth century was the latter, "recrementitious secretion" theory, explicitly considered superseded by one of internal secretion, an advance ushering in the hormone era. A reconstruction of these proto-endocrinological concepts is offered onward from the first, 1490 print edition of Galen's On Semen. Early modern physicians picking up from Galen deliberated widely on the medium and pathway of male and female testicular influences on "the entire body," including the mind, causing "femininity" and "masculinity" in physical, mental-temperamental, and behavioral terms. A switch is discernible from "heat and strength" (Galen) to blood-borne "virility" or testicular vapor (such as proposed in 1564 by Tomás Rodrigues da Veiga), to iatrochemical postulations of a "seminal ferment" (suggested in the late 1650s, perhaps independently, by Thomas Willis at Oxford and Lambert van Velthuysen in Utrecht), finally to a "seminal recrement" or "reabsorbed semen" concept soon after (emergent in the posthumous work of Giovanni Alfonso Borelli, among others). During the late eighteenth century, mounting controversy surrounded both the very idea of that concept and the involved anatomical pathways, informed by multiple experiments.
Topics: Humans; Masculinity; Male; History, 19th Century; History, 20th Century; Femininity; History, 17th Century; History, 18th Century; Female; History, 16th Century; History, 15th Century; Semen
PubMed: 38831233
DOI: 10.1007/s10508-024-02888-4 -
Jornal de Pediatria May 2024It was to verify the association between the definition of sex of rearing and, clinical and cytogenetic features among patients with genital ambiguity referred without a...
OBJECTIVE
It was to verify the association between the definition of sex of rearing and, clinical and cytogenetic features among patients with genital ambiguity referred without a sex assignment.
METHODS
The sample consisted of 133 patients with genital ambiguity seen at a single reference service. These patients did not have a defined social sex at the first consultation and their etiological diagnosis was obtained during follow-up.
RESULTS
A total of 133 cases were included, 74 of which were reared as males and 59 as females. No correlation was found between the year of birth and the year of the first consultation with the definition of sex of rearing. However, the definition of sex of rearing was associated with age at the first consultation, severity of genital ambiguity, presence of palpable gonad(s), presence of uterus on ultrasound, karyotype, and diagnosis. Palpable gonad(s), more virilized genitalia, absence of a uterus on ultrasound, 46, XY karyotype, or a karyotype with sex chromosome abnormalities emerged as strong predictors for defining male sex. All 77 (58 %) patients over 18 years old had a gender identity in accordance with the sex of rearing; though 9 of 77 (12 %) had homo or bisexual orientation, especially girls with Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia.
CONCLUSIONS
Clinical and cytogenetic data were strongly associated with the definition of the sex of rearing of children with genital ambiguity referred to a DSD center without sex assignment. Management in a specialized center allows the establishment of a gender identity in accordance with the sex of rearing.
PubMed: 38823786
DOI: 10.1016/j.jped.2024.05.001 -
American Journal of Men's Health 2024In this study, we formally examine the association between penis size dissatisfaction and gun ownership in America. The primary hypothesis, derived from the psychosexual...
In this study, we formally examine the association between penis size dissatisfaction and gun ownership in America. The primary hypothesis, derived from the psychosexual theory of gun ownership, asserts that men who are more dissatisfied with the size of their penises will be more likely to personally own guns. To test this hypothesis, we used data collected from the 2023 () survey, a national probability sample of 1,840 men, and regression analyses to model personal gun ownership as a function of penis size dissatisfaction, experiences with penis enlargement, social desirability, masculinity, body mass, mental health, and a range of sociodemographic characteristics. We find that men who are dissatisfied with the size of their penises are likely to personally own guns across outcomes, including any gun ownership, military-style rifle ownership, and total number of guns owned. The inverse association between penis size dissatisfaction and gun ownership is linear; however, the association is weakest among men ages 60 and older. With these findings in mind, we failed to observe any differences in personal gun ownership between men who have and have not attempted penis enlargement. To our knowledge, this is the first study to formally examine the association between penis size and personal gun ownership in America. Our findings fail to support the psychosexual theory of gun ownership. Alternative theories are posited for the apparent inverse association between penis size dissatisfaction and personal gun ownership, including higher levels of testosterone and constructionist explanations.
Topics: Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Adult; United States; Firearms; Penis; Masculinity; Ownership; Young Adult; Surveys and Questionnaires; Body Dissatisfaction; Adolescent; Aged
PubMed: 38819006
DOI: 10.1177/15579883241255830