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Dive into the research topics where Beth A. Mohr is active.

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Featured researches published by Beth A. Mohr.


Urology | 2000

Modifiable risk factors and erectile dysfunction: can lifestyle changes modify risk? ☆

Carol A. Derby; Beth A. Mohr; Irwin Goldstein; Henry A. Feldman; Catherine B. Johannes; John B. McKinlay

OBJECTIVES To prospectively examine whether changes in smoking, heavy alcohol consumption, sedentary lifestyle, and obesity are associated with the risk of erectile dysfunction. METHODS Data were collected as part of a cohort study of a random sample of men 40 to 70 years old, selected from street listings in the Boston Metropolitan Area, Massachusetts. In-home interviews were completed by 1709 men at baseline in 1987 to 1989 and 1156 men at follow-up in 1995 to 1997 (average follow-up 8.8 years). Analyses included 593 men without erectile dysfunction at baseline, who were free of prostate cancer, and had not been treated for heart disease or diabetes. The incidence of moderate to complete erectile dysfunction was determined by discriminant analysis of responses to a self-administered sexual function questionnaire. RESULTS Obesity status was associated with erectile dysfunction (P = 0.006), with baseline obesity predicting a higher risk regardless of follow-up weight loss. Physical activity status was associated with erectile dysfunction (P = 0.01), with the highest risk among men who remained sedentary and the lowest among those who remained active or initiated physical activity. Changes in smoking and alcohol consumption were not associated with the incidence of erectile dysfunction (P >0.3). CONCLUSIONS Midlife changes may be too late to reverse the effects of smoking, obesity, and alcohol consumption on erectile dysfunction. In contrast, physical activity may reduce the risk of erectile dysfunction even if initiated in midlife. Early adoption of healthy lifestyles may be the best approach to reducing the burden of erectile dysfunction on the health and well-being of older men.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2001

Risk factors for clinical benign prostatic hyperplasia in a community-based population of healthy aging men

James B. Meigs; Beth A. Mohr; Michael J. Barry; Mary Collins; John B. McKinlay

We defined risk factors for a clinical diagnosis of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) among subjects of the population-based Massachusetts Male Aging Study. In 1987-89 1709 men aged 40-70 provided baseline risk factor data and were followed for a mean of 9 years; 1019 men without prostate cancer provided follow-up data. We classified men with clinical BPH at follow-up if they reported (1) frequent or difficulty urinating and were told by a health professional that they had an enlarged or swollen prostate or (2) if they reported having surgery for BPH. At follow-up the prevalence of clinical BPH was 19.4%, increasing from 8.4% of men aged 38-49 years to 33.5% of men aged 60-70 years (P < 0.001 for trend). Elevated free PSA levels (age- and total PSA-adjusted OR, top vs. bottom quartile ng/mL 4.4, 95% CI 1.9-10.5), heart disease (age-adjusted OR 2.1, CI 1.3-3.3), and use of beta-blocker medications (OR 1.8, CI 1.1-3.0) increased odds for BPH, while current cigarette smoking (OR 0.5, CI 0.3-0.8) and high levels of physical activity (top vs. bottom quartile kcals/day OR 0.5, CI 0.3-0.9) decreased odds of BPH. All but the medication effects persisted in fully adjusted multivariable models. Total or fat calorie intake, sexual activity level, alcohol intake, body mass index, waist-hip ratio, diastolic blood pressure, a history of diabetes, hypertension, vasectomy, or serum levels of androgens or estrogens did not individually predict clinical BPH. We conclude that physical exercise and cigarette smoking appear to protect against development of clinical BPH. Elevated free PSA levels predict clinical BPH independent of total PSA levels. Risk associated with heart disease does not appear to be due solely to detection bias or to effects of heart disease medications. A wide variety of other characteristics appear to have no influence on risk for clinical BPH.


Journal of Sex Research | 2003

Sexual functioning and practices in a multi‐ethnic study of midlife women: Baseline results from swan

Virginia S. Cain; Catherine B. Johannes; Nancy E. Avis; Beth A. Mohr; Miriam Schocken; Joan Skurnick; Marcia G. Ory

This study examined the sexual practices and function of midlife women by ethnicity (African American, Caucasian, Chinese, Hispanic, Japanese) and menopausal status. Sexual behavior was compared in 3,262 women in the baseline cohort of SWAN. Participants were 42 to 52 years old, premenopausal or early perimenopausal, and not hysterectomized or using hormones. Analysis used multivariate proportional odds regression. In our sample, 79% had engaged in sex with a partner in the last 6 months, and a third considered sex to be very important. Common reasons for no sex (n = 676) were lack of partner (67%), lack of interest (33%), and fatigue (16%). Compared with Caucasians, Japanese and Chinese women were less likely, and African Americans more likely, to report sex as very important (p < 0.005). Significant ethnic differences were found for frequency of all practices. Perimenopause status was associated only with higher frequencies of masturbation and pain during intercourse.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2005

Normal, bound and nonbound testosterone levels in normally ageing men: results from the Massachusetts Male Ageing Study

Beth A. Mohr; André T. Guay; Amy B. O'Donnell; John B. McKinlay

Objective  There is little consensus on what androgen levels are ‘normal’ for healthy, ageing men. Using data from the Massachusetts Male Ageing Study (MMAS), we estimated age‐specific, normal androgen levels for men aged 40–79 years while accounting for health status and behavioural factors known to influence hormone levels.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2004

Changes in Sexual Function in Middle-Aged and Older Men: Longitudinal Data from the Massachusetts Male Aging Study

Andre B. Araujo; Beth A. Mohr; John B. McKinlay

Objectives: To describe within‐individual change in sexual function over a 9‐year period and to determine whether the amount of change differs by age group.


Urology | 2001

Are serum hormones associated with the risk of prostate cancer? Prospective results from the Massachusetts Male Aging Study

Beth A. Mohr; Henry A. Feldman; Leslie A. Kalish; Christopher Longcope; John B. McKinlay

OBJECTIVES To determine whether prediagnostic serum hormones are predictive of prostate cancer risk in a sample of men 40 to 70 years old at baseline. METHODS Seventeen serum hormones, including androgens, estrogens, and adrenal and pituitary hormones, were measured at baseline (1987 to 1989) and used to predict incident prostate cancer by follow-up (1995 to 1997) using data from the Massachusetts Male Aging Study, a prospective, population-based random sample. RESULTS Seventy men (4%) of 1576 were diagnosed with prostate cancer between the baseline and follow-up periods (approximately 8 years). None of the hormones were associated with prostate cancer risk except for androstanediol glucuronide (AAG), which exhibited a nonlinear, inverse relationship with prostate cancer (P <0.003) when age, body mass index, alcohol use, dihydrotestosterone, and total prostate-specific antigen were controlled for. Men in the second, third, and fourth quartiles of AAG relative to the first were less likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer, although only the comparison of the second versus the first achieved statistical significance (odds ratio 0.2, 99% confidence interval 0.04 to 0.6). No dose-response relationships were observed. CONCLUSIONS The lack of association with most hormones and the nonlinear association with AAG calls into question whether serum hormones collected during midlife are risk factors for prostate cancer.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2007

Testosterone, Sex Hormone–Binding Globulin, and Frailty in Older Men

Beth A. Mohr; Shalender Bhasin; Varant Kupelian; Andre B. Araujo; Amy B. O'Donnell; John B. McKinlay

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether testosterone (T) levels are associated with frailty or its components.


Medical Care | 2012

Association of military deployment of a parent or spouse and changes in dependent use of health care services.

Mary Jo Larson; Beth A. Mohr; Rachel Sayko Adams; Grant Ritter; Jennifer Perloff; Thomas V. Williams; Diana D. Jeffery; Christopher P. Tompkins

Background:U.S. Armed Forces members and spouses report increased stress associated with combat deployment. It is unknown, however, whether these deployment stressors lead to increased dependent medication use and health care utilization. Objective:To determine whether the deployment of Army active duty members (sponsors) is associated with changes in dependent health care utilization. Design:A quasi-experimental, pre-post study of health care patterns of more than 55,000 nonpregnant spouses and 137,000 children of deployed sponsors and a comparison group of dependents. Measures:Changes in dependent total utilization in the military health system, and separately in military-provided and purchased care services in the year following the sponsors’ deployment month for office visit services (generalist, specialist); emergency department visits; institutional stays; psychotropic medication (any, antidepressant, antianxiety, antistimulant classes). Results:Sponsor deployment was associated with net increased use of specialist office visits (relative percent change 4.2% spouses; 8.8% children), antidepressants (6.7% spouses; 17.2% children), and antianxiety medications (14.2% spouses; 10.0% children; P<0.01) adjusting for group differences. Deployment was consistently associated with increased use of purchased care services, partially, or fully offset by decreased use of military treatment facilities. Conclusions:These results suggest that emotional or behavioral issues are contributing to increased specialist visits and reliance on medications during sponsors’ deployments. A shift to receipt of services from civilian settings raises questions about coordination of care when families temporarily relocate, family preferences, and military provider capacity during deployment phases. Findings have important implications for the military health system and community providers who serve military families, especially those with children.


American Journal of Public Health | 2014

Missed opportunity for alcohol problem prevention among army active duty service members postdeployment

Mary Jo Larson; Beth A. Mohr; Rachel Sayko Adams; Nikki R. Wooten; Thomas V. Williams

OBJECTIVES We identified to what extent the Department of Defense postdeployment health surveillance program identifies at-risk drinking, alone or in conjunction with psychological comorbidities, and refers service members who screen positive for additional assessment or care. METHODS We completed a cross-sectional analysis of 333 803 US Army active duty members returning from Iraq or Afghanistan deployments in fiscal years 2008 to 2011 with a postdeployment health assessment. Alcohol measures included 2 based on self-report quantity-frequency items-at-risk drinking (positive Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test alcohol consumption questions [AUDIT-C] screen) and severe alcohol problems (AUDIT-C score of 8 or higher)-and another based on the interviewing providers assessment. RESULTS Nearly 29% of US Army active duty members screened positive for at-risk drinking, and 5.6% had an AUDIT-C score of 8 or higher. Interviewing providers identified potential alcohol problems among only 61.8% of those screening positive for at-risk drinking and only 74.9% of those with AUDIT-C scores of 8 or higher. They referred for a follow-up visit to primary care or another setting only 29.2% of at-risk drinkers and only 35.9% of those with AUDIT-C scores of 8 or higher. CONCLUSIONS This study identified missed opportunities for early intervention for at-risk drinking. Future research should evaluate the effect of early intervention on long-term outcomes.


Substance Use & Misuse | 2013

Rationale and methods of the Substance Use and Psychological Injury Combat Study (SUPIC): a longitudinal study of Army service members returning from deployment in FY2008-2011.

Mary Jo Larson; Rachel Sayko Adams; Beth A. Mohr; Alex H. S. Harris; Elizabeth L. Merrick; Wendy Funk; Keith Hofmann; Nikki R. Wooten; Diana D. Jeffery; Thomas V. Williams

The Substance Use and Psychological Injury Combat Study (SUPIC) will examine whether early detection and intervention for post-deployment problems among Army Active Duty and National Guard/Reservists returning from Iraq or Afghanistan are associated with improved long-term substance use and psychological outcomes. This paper describes the rationale and significance of SUPIC, and presents demographic and deployment characteristics of the study sample (N = 643,205), and self-reported alcohol use and health problems from the subsample with matched post-deployment health assessments (N = 487,600). This longitudinal study aims to provide new insight into the long-term post-deployment outcomes of Army members by combining service member data from the Military Health System and Veterans Health Administration.

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Nikki R. Wooten

University of South Carolina

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Henry A. Feldman

Boston Children's Hospital

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Leslie A. Kalish

Boston Children's Hospital

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