Skip to main content

Health and suffering are associated with social support: a cross-sectional study of women and mothers with exhaustion and pain

Abstract

Background

Despite women are generally overrepresented in behavioral, mental, and musculoskeletal disorders, motherhood as a central part of women’s life is poorly understood in relation to exhaustion and long-lasting pain. Mothers’ health impairments imply suffering both for herself and her family. A profound understanding of health is needed taking mothers’ subjective health experience, their suffering and life situation into account to give women, their families and society better prerequisites to alleviate exhaustion and long-lasting pain. The aim of the study was to describe health and suffering of women and mothers undergoing rehabilitation for long-lasting pain and exhaustion and its correlation with perceived social support.

Methods

The study had a cross-sectional design with an exploratory approach. A main sample consisted of 166 women undergoing rehabilitation for exhaustion and long-lasting pain and a reference sample included 129 women working and studying within health care professions. Both samples included women with and without children. Women’s subjective health and suffering was assessed from a caring science perspective using the recently developed and validated Health and Suffering Scale. Two additional scales measuring exhaustion and social support were distributed among the two samples. Descriptive statistics and multiple linear regression models, including health and suffering and perceived social support, were analyzed.

Results

Mothers undergoing rehabilitation for pain and exhaustion reported significantly poorer health and more suffering compared to healthy mothers, but similar health and suffering when compared with childless women in rehabilitation. Health and suffering were correlated with perceived social support among both healthy and exhausted mothers. In both samples, the correlation between health and suffering and social support was stronger among mothers than among women without children.

Conclusions

Women and mothers living with exhaustion and long-lasting pain show signs of unbearable suffering and perceived insufficient social support. Social support from various sources particularly helps mothers to create meaning in life and make their suffering bearable. Hence, health care must address the fact that mothers are dependent on their immediate social environment and that this dependency interacts with their health and suffering on an existential level.

Peer Review reports

Background

Women are generally overrepresented in behavioral, mental, and musculoskeletal disorders [1,2,3,4]. In Sweden, particularly women aged between 30 and 44 years are at risk of developing stress-related illness and exhaustion seemingly related to a double burden of family and working life (throughout this article the term exhaustion is preferred as a broader concept of burnout) [4, 5]. Motherhood is a life-long commitment that continuously influences women’s health even when children have reached adulthood [6,7,8]. Further, mental health problems during child-rearing years were found to predict exhaustion among employed mothers later in life [9]. In particular women with long-lasting pain, but also individuals with exhaustion, often feel not taken seriously and even disbelieved by the health care system causing them further suffering [10,11,12]. The significance of suffering has been identified as missing in traditional medicine’s understanding of health [13, 14]. A definition of modest—instead of perfect—health focusing on a human being’s ability to adapt has been called for [13]. Thus, a more profound understanding of health is needed taking a woman’s subjective health experience, including her suffering and life situation into account to give women, their families and society better prerequisites to alleviate and treat exhaustion and long-lasting pain. In caring science, suffering is a basic concept that is considered central to understanding subjective health [15, 16]. This idea of health, building a balanced entity with suffering, moves beyond the definition of perfect health and physical, mental, behavioral symptomatology.

According to nursing theorists and philosophers, the experience of suffering is a natural part of human life affecting a person on an existential level [16,17,18,19,20]. Hence, in caring science, health has been described as building a balanced entity with suffering [16]. Therefore, the experiences of health and suffering are not regarded as mutually exclusive, rather health reflects an individual’s ability to meaningfully integrate suffering into their own life [16]. It has been theorized that meaning-creation with others helps to integrate suffering and to make it bearable [21]. Andermo et al. [15] further conceptualized the theory of health and suffering by developing a health measurement scale that includes following existential prerequisites for a balanced health: to have an understanding of life, to be in a process of development, to perceive hope and meaning in life and to engage in life. The scale estimates the movement between these conditions and their counterpoints, reflecting how well health and suffering are integrated in an individual’s life [15]. Existing literature on the health of mothers mainly applies psychological [22, 23], medical [7, 24], sociological [5, 25] and epidemiological [26] perspectives, but exploration of mothers’ subjective experience acknowledging both their health and their suffering is limited. Investigating mothers’ health and suffering will have implications for the formation and further development of care and rehabilitation of women with exhaustion and pain, but also for the development and implementation of preventive measures. Hence, in this study, subjective health is measured in relation to suffering as conceptualized by Andermo et al. [15].

A woman’s health and well-being are dependent on a country’s policy context and her immediate social context within which she lives as a mother [6, 27, 28]. The positive association between health and social support is well-known and has been studied for decades [29, 30], also in relation to motherhood [27]. However, it has barely been explored among mothers living with exhaustion and long-lasting pain [31, 32]. Such an explorative investigation is of particular interest for three interplaying reasons. First, exhaustion and long-lasting pain are associated with stress [33, 34], second, motherhood is demanding and can be stressful [6, 35, 36] and third, social support is known to have buffering effects on stress [29, 37, 38].

A qualitative study on women living with pain [11] revealed their health and suffering to be intertwined with an overwhelming life. The women cared for the welfare of their environment, including their family and children leaving them exhausted without the care and support they themselves would have needed [11]. Other studies found that mothers suffering from long-lasting pain or exhaustion perceived a lack of social support [31, 32]. Luthar [35] emphasized how in particular stressed mothers need to be nurtured in warm and supportive relationships. Against the background of these studies, we focus on perceived social support as conceptualized by Zimet et al. [39] to investigate how well mothers are embedded in meaningful and nurturing relationships versus being left alone with their desires, needs and problems. Social support is often categorized into three different areas: emotional, instrumental, and informative support. In short, emotional support means to care for someone, whereas instrumental support refers to practical help and informative support means to give advice [29]. Zimet’s scale of perceived social support focuses on emotional and instrumental support [39, 40].

The aim of the study was to describe health and suffering of women and mothers undergoing rehabilitation for long-lasting pain and exhaustion and its correlation with perceived social support.

Methods

Design

The study has a cross-sectional design and adopts an exploratively oriented approach where motherhood provides context rather than serving as a discerning variable.

Participants

Two samples of women were recruited, one patient and one reference sample. The patient sample was consecutively included at a rehabilitation clinic for exhaustion and long-lasting pain in Stockholm, Sweden. There were 297 eligible patients and the response rate after two reminders was 55.9%, yielding 166 participants. The reference sample consisted of nurses, occupational therapists and physiotherapists studying health care programs for specialization within their profession at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden. Students on a specialization level were chosen to match as far as possible the age, profession, and midlife situation of the patient sample. There were 209 eligible students, inclusion was consecutive. The response rate after two reminders was 61.7%, yielding 129 participants.

Procedure

Patients were informed about the study in the middle of the 10-week rehabilitation period and students were informed at the beginning or the end of a lecture. Patients and students voluntarily signed up for an invitation letter by email that informed them about study participation and that included a personal link to the study’s web survey. Two reminders were sent out after two and four weeks following the first letter. The web survey was identical for all three samples, consisting of sociodemographic questions, the Health and Suffering Scale (HSS), the Karolinska Exhaustion Disorder Scale (KEDS) and the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS). Data were collected between October 2018 and August 2019.

Measurements

Sociodemographic data were collected using items from the government agency, Statistics Sweden [41]. One study-specific item with a free-comment field collected information about caregiving responsibility for relatives other than children.

The Health and Suffering Scale (HSS) is a self-report scale that measures perceived suffering in relation to health from a caring science perspective [42]. The scale consists of nine items with a 101-step VAS response scale that is placed between word pairs reflecting health and suffering inspired by the theory of Eriksson (2006), for example “life is a struggle – life is a gift”, “life without meaning – meaningful life”, “stuck in negative life patterns – in a process of development”, or “unbearable suffering – bearable suffering”. A low score on an item reflects perceived unbearable suffering and health hindrances in life whereas a high score on an item reflects bearable suffering and the experience of health in life. In the current study, the 101-step VAS scale was transformed to a five-point scale in accordance with a psychometric evaluation of the scale [42]. Possible sum scores range between nine and 45. The nine-item scale was found to have robust psychometric properties among Swedish samples of healthy women and women with exhaustion and long-lasting pain. The scale showed to be internally consistent among mothers in rehabilitation α = 0.94 (CI 0.92–0.95), women without children in rehabilitation α = 0.94 (CI 0.91–0.96), and α = 0.92 (CI 0.93–0.95) among healthy mothers.

The Karolinska Exhaustion Disorder Scale (KEDS) is a self-report measure for exhaustion disorder, validated in Swedish among both healthy and exhausted individuals [43]. KEDS consists of nine items measuring the degree of stress-induced exhaustion through to self-reported ability to concentrate, memory, physical stamina, mental stamina, recovery, sleep, sensory impressions, experience of demands and irritation and anger on a seven-point Likert scale. A high sum score indicates a high degree of exhaustion. Possible scores range from between nine and 63. In the current samples, the internal consistency of the KEDS was α = 0.83 (CI 0.79–0.87) for mothers in rehabilitation, α = 0.87 (CI 0.81–0.92) for women without children in rehabilitation, and α = 0.88 (CI 0.85–0.9) for healthy mothers.

The Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS) was developed by Zimet et al. [39] and translated and culturally adapted to the Swedish context by Ekbäck, Benzein, Lindberg and Årestedt [40]. The MSPSS is a self-report scale that measures perceived social support on a seven-point Likert scale. It consists of 12 items that are evenly distributed across the three dimensions with four items each: family, friends, and significant others. A total sum score of all items ranges from between 12 and 84, sum scores of the subscales range from between four and 28, higher scores indicate higher perceived social support. The Swedish version showed to have robust psychometric properties among women with hirsutism and among nursing students [40]. In the current study, the internal consistency of the MSPSS was α = 0.94 (CI 0.93–0.95) for mothers in rehabilitation, α = 0.95 (CI 0.93–0.97) for women without children in rehabilitation, and α = 0.95 (CI 0.93–0.95) for healthy mothers.

Statistical analysis

A common approach in exploring factors that possibly influence the health of parents is to compare parents to individuals without children [44, 45]. Thus, estimates of health and suffering and perceived social support among mothers undergoing rehabilitation for long-lasting pain and exhaustion, among women without children in rehabilitation, and among healthy mothers were calculated and described. Two sample t-test was used to compare estimates of health and suffering and perceived social support between mothers and women without children and between mothers in rehabilitation and healthy mothers. Further, the degree of exhaustion was compared to explore possible differences in exhaustion between mothers in different rehabilitation programs as well as healthy mothers.

Linear regression was performed to investigate whether perceived social support accounts for a variation in health and suffering among women. In the main regression model, the total sum score of the Health and Suffering Scale was included as a dependent variable and perceived social support as measured by the total sum score of MSPSS was included as a single independent variable. In a subsequent model the subscales were included as separated independent variables in a multiple regression model to explore their specific association with health and suffering, adjusted for the remaining other two sources of support.

In a last step, based only on data of mothers, the main model was extended to multiple linear regression models with adjustments for possible confounders as follows: degree of exhaustion disorder (KEDS score), living in a relationship (cohabiting/single coded as + 0.5/− 0.5), number of children living at home and age. KEDS was included to adjust for the association between exhaustion and suffering and its possible negative effect on social support (exhausted and suffering mothers might not make use of their social environment). The other adjustments were of theoretical interest because living in a relationship is assumed to be related to perceived social support, the number of children living at home can affect mothers’ health [4] and possibly mothers’ dependence on social support. Finally, the results of the regression models were compared on a structural level between the two groups of mothers.

The following assumptions for linear regression analyses were fulfilled. The sample size was with good margins above the minimum requirements of variable to participant ratio of 1:10 [46]. The residuals in the applied models were normally distributed and homoscedastic. The residuals in the extended model indicated a trend towards heteroscedasticity when applied among healthy mothers, no such indications were observed for the model among mothers in rehabilitation. Influence of any observations on the multiple regression models as calculated by Cook’s distance had maximum values of < 0.23. Collinearity diagnostics according to Belsley [47] indicated acceptable multicollinearity for the model, including all three subscales of MSPSS as separated independent variables. In the extended multiple regression model, any indications of dependency of the variates were not found.

Analyses were run in MatLab version R2019b (MathWorks, Massachusetts, USA). Cohen’s d was calculated according to Fritz, Morris and Richler [48] using the MatLab code by Bettinardi [49].

Missing items

Among women in rehabilitation, 9.8% of HSS data were missing versus 1.3% among healthy mothers. In the current study, HSS data were generated by a digital slider which by default was positioned on zero, implying unbearable suffering. For some participants, this default position might have appeared to be in the correct position of unbearable suffering without having moved the slider. In contrast, data in MSPSS and KEDS were missing for 0.8% and 1.4% of observations among women in rehabilitation versus 0% and 0.1% among healthy mothers. Missing values were assumed to have an equal distribution among all three instruments and were therefore substituted with a value of zero in the HSS generated data.

Results

Characteristics of the sample

The majority of women (77.7%, n = 129) in rehabilitation had children at any age (Table 1). Seventy-five mothers (58.1%) were undergoing rehabilitation for long-lasting pain, 51 mothers (39.1%) were undergoing rehabilitation for exhaustion (Table 2). Among the healthy women, 108 (83.7%) were mothers of children at any age. Eight mothers (6.2%) from the healthy group reported having received rehabilitation for long-lasting pain during the last three months (Table 2).

Table 1 Sociodemographic characteristics of respondents
Table 2 Sick leave and rehabilitation among respondents

Mothers undergoing rehabilitation were older and had to a larger extent older children living at home when compared with healthy mothers (Tables 1, 3). Seventeen mothers (13.2%) in rehabilitation versus three mothers (2.8%) in the healthy sample reported having a caring responsibility for other relatives, e.g., a frail parent. An additional five (3.9%) women in rehabilitation versus two healthy mothers (1.9%) informed about having caregiving responsibility for their children with special needs, e.g., Down syndrome or autism. Almost a third of mothers in rehabilitation (28.7%) were single mothers whereas 12% of the healthy mothers reported living without a partner. Most women without children were living without a partner in both samples. These characteristics are summarized in Table 1.

Table 3 Characteristics of children living at home

There was no significant difference in the degree of exhaustion disorder (KEDS sum score mean +/ − SD) between mothers undergoing rehabilitation for pain (41.9 +/ − 7.8) and mothers undergoing rehabilitation for exhaustion (41.1 +/− 8.1). Mothers in rehabilitation reported significantly higher KEDS scores (41.6 +/− 7.8) than healthy mothers (25.3 +/− 8.7; p < 0.05, d = 2.1).

Health and suffering and perceived social support

Health and suffering as measured by HSS and perceived social support as measured by MSPSS reported by all four sub samples are presented in Table 4. Mothers undergoing rehabilitation for pain and exhaustion reported significantly lower estimates of HSS than healthy mothers (p < 0.001, d = 1.518), but similar estimates of HSS when compared with childless women in rehabilitation. Healthy mothers on the other hand revealed to have significantly higher HSS scores than their childless healthy counterparts (p = 0.012, d = 0.608).

Table 4 Health and suffering and perceived social support among mothers living with exhaustion and long-lasting pain compared to healthy mothers and women without children

MSPSS scores differed significantly between mothers in rehabilitation and healthy mothers (p < 0.001, d = 0.82), but not between mothers and childless women in rehabilitation. This significant difference of MSPSS between the two groups of mothers was maintained when splitting the general measure of MSPSS into its three subscales of ‘family’, ‘friends’, and ‘significant others’ (p < 0.001, d = 0.636– 0.774) (Table 4). There were no significant differences in any estimates of MSPSS between healthy mothers and healthy women without children.

Health and suffering in relation to perceived social support among women in rehabilitation

In the main regression model (Table 5), the association between HSS (sum score) and MSPSS (total sum score) was explored. For women without children, the model explained 25.3% (F2,35 = 11.9, p < 0.05) of the variability of HSS. The model explained 34.3% (F2,127 = 66.3, p < 0.05) of the variability of HSS estimates among mothers undergoing rehabilitation. MSPSS was found to be significantly correlated with HSS (b = 0.31, p < 0.05). Thus, the higher the levels of social support reported, the better health and the less suffering the mothers perceived.

Table 5 Linear regression models with health and suffering (HSS) as the criterion variable among women in rehabilitation and among healthy women

In the multiple linear regression model in which all three MSPSS subscales were included as separate independent variables (F4,125 = 22.5, p < 0.001; R2 = 0.351), the subscale ‘significant others’ had the strongest correlation with HSS of all three (b = 0.487, p = 0.002). The subscale ‘family’ was found to be non-significant (Table 6).

Table 6 Multiple linear regression models with health and suffering (HSS) as the criterion variable among mothers in rehabilitation and among healthy mothers

In a last step, the correlation of MSPSS with HSS was adjusted for KEDS (sum score), living in a relationship, number of children living at home and age of the mothers. This extended model (F6,123 = 27.2, p < 0.001) explained 52.5% of the variability of HSS scores among mothers. MSPSS remained significantly correlated (b = 0.21, p < 0.001) with HSS when adjusted for KEDS, living in a relationship, number of children at home and mothers’ age. KEDS was found to have a significant inverse correlation with HSS, implying that mothers experienced poorer health and more suffering with increasing degrees of exhaustion (b =  − 0.462, p < 0.001). Remaining independent variables were found to be non-significant (Table 6).

Health and suffering in relation to perceived social support among healthy women

The regression analyses of the data of healthy mothers (F2,106 = 37.2, p < 0.001) mainly reflected a similar result pattern as obtained in the rehabilitation sample with MSPSS being significantly correlated with HSS in all models (b = 0.252, p < 0.001), but with less variability explained compared to the rehabilitation sample. This difference was specifically evident for the extended model that explained 20.9% less variance of HSS among healthy mothers compared to mothers in rehabilitation. The main model explained 15.1% of the variability of HSS estimates among healthy women without children, but was non-significant (F2,19 = 3.38, p > 0.05) (Table 5).

There was one more exception from the general result pattern. In the multiple linear regression model with all three MSPSS subscales included as separate independent variables (F4,104 = 15.2, p < 0.001; R2 = 0.305), the MSPSS subscale ‘friends’ was non-significant. In similarity with the results among mothers in rehabilitation, MSPSS ‘significant others’ had the strongest correlation (b = 0.435, p = 0.029) with HSS among healthy mothers. In contrast to mothers in rehabilitation, MSPSS ‘family’ was significantly positively associated with HSS among healthy women (b = 0.38, p = 0.019) (Table 6).

The extended model (F6,102 = 9.29, p < 0.001) revealed that MSPSS sustained its significant and positive association with HSS (b = 0.205, p < 0.001) when adjusted for KEDS (sum score), living in a relationship, number of children at home and mothers’ age. In line with mothers in rehabilitation, KEDS was found to have a significant inverse correlation with HSS, but the correlation was weaker (b =  − 0.185, p = 0.009) (Table 6).

Discussion

Focus of the current study was to investigate mothers’ health from a caring science perspective taking women’s suffering into consideration. Mothers living with exhaustion and long-lasting pain reported similar health experiences and suffering as their childless counterparts, but significantly poorer health and more suffering than healthy mothers. A small difference between healthy mothers and healthy women without children was found, indicating that mothers experienced better health and less suffering than women without children. Purpose and meaning in life are usually mentioned as the great rewards of parenthood [6]. However, research in the field has come to inconclusive results of whether motherhood in itself enhances or burdens women’s overall health [26, 50]. We found low perceived social support to be a central factor as well as an equally high share of caring responsibility for relatives that united women with and without children in their suffering. The mothers living with exhaustion and long-lasting pain perceived significantly less social support from their family, friends, and significant others than healthy mothers which was related to more suffering. This underlines how vulnerable these women are on a relational level and that their suffering seems to be related to a perceived loneliness in life [14]. Among the two groups of childless women, the relationship between health and suffering and perceived social support was weaker or even non-significant. Our results suggest that mothers’ health and suffering is to a larger extent dependent on emotional and practical support when compared with the health of women without children. It has previously been emphasized how crucial it is for mothers’ well-being to be emotionally embedded in authentic relationships when they are challenged as mothers [51].

Within caring sciences, individuals are considered relational and fundamentally dependent on community [52]. There is evidence for a significant overlap between physical and social pain, suggesting that similar gene expressions, inflammatory responses and neural pathways are activated in both physical and social pain reactions [38]. This implies that women and in particular mothers need to be cared for in a way that make women feel they are emotionally supported, but also help them strengthen their immediate relationships with others. Considering the relational vulnerability of these women, health care should avoid an isolated focus on the woman and her disorder but also involve significant others in the care to alleviate suffering related to such women’s life situations.

It has previously been emphasized that social support benefits the health of individuals’ suffering when it is of high quality, arising from meaningful social connections, rather than from the mere quantity of persons providing it [38, 53]. Among various sources of perceived social support, our results indicate that support from significant others is the most important for their own health and alleviation of suffering. Mothers in rehabilitation were more often single mothers compared to the sample of healthy mothers. However, social support from various sources was still important whether the women were in a relationship or not. Being in a relationship in itself does not guarantee mothers’ well-being but unconditional comfort and support when needed, regardless of who provides the support [51]. Considering the aspect of quality and meaningful social connections, the study’s caring science approach reveals some new insights into how mothers’ health and their social environment are possibly connected. One explanation could be that an authentic interaction with family, friends and significant others might contribute to enhance their own life-understanding, hope and a meaningful integration of suffering into life. According to Rehnsfeldt and Eriksson [21], such meaning-creating encounters give opportunities to suffer on a conscious level, implying to be in a struggle between meaninglessness and meaning. In the communion with others, their own suffering might be confirmed, and space might be given to express one’s own suffering, and consequently, an individual’s suffering is alleviated and becomes bearable [21]. Both exhausted women and women with long-lasting pain reported signs of unbearable suffering that possibly could be alleviated as a result of supportive and caring encounters. Such encounters might be indispensable for mothers facing various challenges in their daily life with children [6, 51]. Our results highlight how the health of a mother depends on her immediate social ties stressing that relational aspects of women’s health need to be addressed by health care.

A reverse causality needs to be considered for the association of health and suffering with social support. Mothers suffering from exhaustion and pain might not have the energy to maintain or make use of their social support available. Such an explanation could be particularly plausible among mothers who already have high caregiving responsibilities related to parenthood limiting their personal resources to care for their social network. For example, a study on individuals undergoing rehabilitation for long-lasting pain found that these patients tend to underutilize their social support available [53]. Further, some distressed individuals might consciously avoid burdening others with their own problems and concerns [29]. But a reverse scenario could also be the case, that friends or colleagues withdraw from the social environment because they might be overwhelmed by or insecure in encountering a person living with a disorder or disability [54, 55]. When adjusting for exhaustion as a possible confounder of the association between social support and health and suffering, the association decreased, but remained significant. This indicates that the association of perceived social support and health and suffering is to a certain degree confounded by exhaustion and, thus, in parts can be explained by a lack of energy to socialize.

Regardless of the direction of possible causality, the association of social support with mothers’ health and suffering has several implications for clinical practice. Social support is a mutual interaction and not one-sided and second, not all social support is positive [29]. Consequently, mothers need to care about their social interactions with others and actively engage in relationships that improve their health and alleviate their suffering. This implies that mothers living with pain and exhaustion possibly would benefit from interventions encouraging them to form joyful and meaningful social ties making their suffering bearable [38]. Interestingly, support from family did not significantly correlate with health and suffering of mothers in rehabilitation when adjusted for support from friends and significant others, whereas the two latter ones remained significantly correlated. This suggests that women in rehabilitation already rely on social support from chosen resources (in contrast to family that cannot be chosen), but that they possibly experience a gap between support they need and perceived support. Possible reasons could be that mothers’ chosen social network is vulnerable in itself or deficient. Mothers might need help in surrounding themselves with more supportive friends and significant others according to their own needs and most beneficial for their health [38]. Another explanation could be—as previously mentioned—that individuals living with pain (and exhaustion) should learn to ask for support to a greater extent than they are used to [53]. Further, family/couple counseling or nurses or midwives following the mother and her family through a period could serve as a source of emotional support providing space to express their own suffering. Nurse-led support programs for vulnerable mothers addressing human ecology, self-efficacy and human attachment were shown to be beneficial for various mother- and children health outcomes [56].

On a societal level, the intertwinement of mothers’ health and suffering with social support might be more challenging to understand because the Swedish welfare system internationally is recognized as exemplary in regard to women’s opportunities to reconcile motherhood and work [57]. The Swedish society highly rates the values of equality, gender equality and individualism, but the other side of the coin is that it risks pushing traditional values of dependence on family and community to the sidelines [58]. The Swedish discourse in which gender equality is interwoven with individualism might create a context in which support from the immediate social environment might be undervalued. Consequently, it might risk leaving some mothers lonelier and more isolated with their social and emotional needs. Both health care and employers need to acknowledge these health risks for mothers and encourage women to create meaningful social ties. Interventions that created meaningful and authentic connections between vulnerable mothers were found to make mothers with a stressful working life feel cared for and less lonely [59].

Limitations

A major limitation of the study is that the healthy reference sample exclusively consisted of health care professionals studying at a medical university. Thus, a comparison and an adjustment of sociodemographic confounders like age, education, and income was not considered to be meaningful. A reference sample from the general population would have been more suitable. However, other studies within the field found these sociodemographic factors to not be that influential on mothers’ health [60]. Regarding the data collected, it would have been of interest to specifically ask women whether they have children with special needs to map more specifically women’s total caregiving responsibility related to their motherhood. However, some women took the initiative to report this information in the free comment fields.

Conclusion

Describing health and suffering from a caring science perspective widened the common medical and biopsychosocial understanding of exhaustion and long-lasting pain among women with an existential dimension of suffering and meaning in life. Women living with exhaustion and long-lasting pain are vulnerable to suffering without sufficient emotional and practical support, making their suffering unbearable. Particularly in women who are mothers, health and suffering interact with their immediate social environment on an existential level. Mothers living with exhaustion and pain need reliable social ties that create meaning in life and thereby make suffering bearable and reconcilable with health. Health care must address this intertwinement of mothers’ health, suffering and social support. Both preventive interventions on a primary care level and a specific focus in rehabilitation on social support could help mothers to actively reflect on and form social ties that are perceived as alleviating suffering and beneficial for their own health. In clinical encounters with women presenting with exhaustion or long-lasting pain, it is important to empathize and provide space for suffering as expressions of emotional support and caring.

Availability of data and materials

Raw data are archived at Karolinska Institutet, Sweden. Data supporting the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author AG on reasonable request.

Abbreviations

HSS:

Health and Suffering Scale

KEDS:

Karolinska Exhaustion Disorder Scale

MSPSS:

Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support

References

  1. Pietilä-Holmner E, Enthoven P, Gerdle B, Molander P, Stålnacke BM. Long-term outcomes of multimodal rehabilitation in primary care for patients with chronic pain. J Rehabil Med. 2020;52:jrm00023.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  2. Osika Friberg I, Krantz G, Maatta S, Jarbrink K. Sex differences in health care consumption in Sweden: a register-based cross-sectional study. Scand J Public Health. 2016;44(3):264–73.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  3. Marchand A, Blanc ME. Chronic diseases, age and gender: examining the contribution to burnout symptoms in a sample of 2075 Canadian workers. Int Arch Occup Environ Health. 2020;93(7):853–61.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  4. Swedish Insurance Agency. Sjukfrånvaro i psykiatriska diagnoser - En registerstudie av Sveriges arbetande befolkning i åldern 20–69 år [Mental disorder sick leave—A register study of the Swedish working population in ages 20 to 69 years]. Stockholm: Swedish Insurance Agency; 2020. 108p. Report No.: 2020:8

  5. Nilsen W, Skipstein A, Ostby KA, Mykletun A. Examination of the double burden hypothesis-a systematic review of work-family conflict and sickness absence. Eur J Public Health. 2017;27(3):465–71.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  6. Nomaguchi K, Milkie MA. Parenthood and well-being: a decade in review. J Marriage Fam. 2020;82(1):198–223.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  7. Duarte-Guterman P, Leuner B, Galea LAM. The long and short term effects of motherhood on the brain. Front Neuroendocrinol. 2019;53:100740.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  8. Graham M. Is being childless detrimental to a woman’s health and well-being across her life course? Womens Health Issues. 2015;25(2):176–84.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  9. Nilsen W, Skipstein A, Demerouti E. Adverse trajectories of mental health problems predict subsequent burnout and work-family conflict—a longitudinal study of employed women with children followed over 18 years. BMC Psychiatry. 2016;16(1):384.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  10. Toye F, Seers K, Allcock N, Briggs M, Carr E, Andrews J, et al. A meta-ethnography of patients’ experience of chronic non-malignant musculoskeletal pain. Health Serv Deliv Res. 2013;1(12):HSDR01120.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  11. Arman M, Gebhardt A, Hök Nordberg J, Andermo S. Women’s lived experiences of chronic pain: faces of gendered suffering. Qual Health Res. 2020;30(5):772–82.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  12. Arman M, Hammarqvist AS, Rehnsfeldt A. Burnout as an existential deficiency–lived experiences of burnout sufferers. Scand J Caring Sci. 2011;25(2):294–302.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  13. What is health? The ability to adapt. Lancet 2009 March 7; 373(9666):781.

  14. Cassell EJ. The nature of suffering and the goals of medicine. New York: Oxford University Press; 1991.

    Google Scholar 

  15. Andermo S, Hök J, Sundberg T, Falkenberg T, Arman M. Measuring patients’ health and suffering—the first stages of instrument development. Scand J Caring Sci. 2018;32(4):1322–33.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  16. Eriksson K. The suffering human being. Chicago: Nordic Studies Press; 2006.

    Google Scholar 

  17. Bueno-Gómez N. Conceptualizing suffering and pain. Philos Ethics Humanit Med. 2017;12(7):1–11.

    Google Scholar 

  18. Wiercinski A. Hermeneutic notion of a human being as an acting and suffering person: thinking with Paul Ricoeur. Ethics Progr. 2013;4(2):18–33.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  19. Svenaeus F. The phenomenology of chronic pain: embodiment and alienation. Cont Philos Rev. 2015;48(2):107–22.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  20. Rodgers BL, Cowles KV. A conceptual foundation for human suffering in nursing care and research. J Adv Nurs. 1997;25(5):1048–53.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  21. Rehnsfeldt A, Eriksson K. The progression of suffering implies alleviated suffering. Scand J Caring Sci. 2004;18(3):264–72.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  22. Sanchez-Rodriguez R, Orsini E, Laflaquiere E, Callahan S, Sejourne N. Depression, anxiety, and guilt in mothers with burnout of preschool and school-aged children: insight from a cluster analysis. J Affect Disord. 2019;259:244–50.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  23. Higgins KS, Birnie KA, Chambers CT, Wilson AC, Caes L, Clark AJ, et al. Offspring of parents with chronic pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis of pain, health, psychological, and family outcomes. Pain. 2015;156(11):2256–66.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  24. Floderus B, Hagman M, Aronsson G, Marklund S, Wikman A. Medically certified sickness absence with insurance benefits in women with and without children. Eur J Public Health. 2012;22(1):85–92.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  25. Grönlund A, Öun I. Rethinking work-family conflict : dual-earner policies, role conflict and role expansion in Western Europe. J Eur Soc Policy. 2010;20(3):179–95.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  26. Narusyte J, Björkenstam E, Alexanderson K, Ropponen A, Kjeldgård L, Svedberg P. Occurrence of sickness absence and disability pension in relation to childbirth: a 16-year follow-up study of 6323 Swedish twins. Scand J Public Health. 2015;44(1):98–105.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  27. Balaji AB, Claussen AH, Smith DC, Visser SN, Morales MJ, Perou R. Social support networks and maternal mental health and well-being. J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2007;16(10):1386–96.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  28. Hagqvist E, Gadin KG, Nordenmark M. Work-family conflict and well-being across Europe: the role of gender context. Soc Indic Res. 2017;132(2):785–97.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  29. Thoits PA. Mechanisms linking social ties and support to physical and mental health. J Health Soc Behav. 2011;52(2):145–61.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  30. Reblin M, Uchino BN. Social and emotional support and its implication for health. Curr Opin Psychiatry. 2008;21(2):201–5.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  31. Evans S, Shipton EA, Keenan TR. Psychosocial functioning of mothers with chronic pain: a comparison to pain-free controls. Eur J Pain. 2005;9(6):683–90.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  32. Sejourne N, Sanchez-Rodriguez R, Leboullenger A, Callahan S. Maternal burn-out: an exploratory study. J Reprod Infant Psychol. 2018;36(3):276–88.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  33. Eller-Smith OC, Nicol AL, Christianson JA. Potential mechanisms underlying centralized pain and emerging therapeutic interventions. Front Cell Neurosci. 2018;66:12.

    Google Scholar 

  34. Crofford LJ. Chronic Spain: where the body meets the brain. Trans Am Clin Climatol Assoc. 2015;126:167–83.

    PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  35. Luthar SS. Mothering mothers. Res Hum Dev. 2015;12(3–4):295–303.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  36. Deater-Deckard KD. Parenting stress. New Haven: Yale University Press; 2004.

    Book  Google Scholar 

  37. Kamp KJ, West P, Holmstrom A, Luo Z, Wyatt G, Given B. Systematic review of social support on psychological symptoms and self-management behaviors among adults with inflammatory bowel disease. J Nurs Scholarsh. 2019;51(4):380–9.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  38. Sturgeon JA, Zautra AJ. Social pain and physical pain: shared paths to resilience. Pain Manag. 2016;6(1):63–74.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  39. Zimet GD, Dahlem NW, G. ZS, Farley GK, . The multidimensional scale of perceived social support. J Pers Assess. 1988;52(1):30–41.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  40. Ekbäck M, Benzein E, Lindberg M, Årestedt K. The Swedish version of the multidimensional scale of perceived social support (MSPSS)—a psychometric evaluation study in women with hirsutism and nursing students. Health Qual Life Outcomes. 2013;11:168.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  41. Statistics Sweden. Frågebank över bakgrundsfrågor i postenkätundersökningar [Collection of demographic questions in postal surveys]. Stockholm: Statistics Sweden; 2004. Report No.: 2004:2.

  42. Gebhardt A, Langius-Eklöf A, Andermo S, Arman M. The Health and Suffering Scale—item reduction, reliability and validity among women undergoing rehabilitation for exhaustion and long-lasting pain. Nursing Open. Forthcoming 2021.

  43. Beser A, Sorjonen K, Wahlberg K, Peterson U, Nygren A, Asberg M. Construction and evaluation of a self rating scale for stress-induced exhaustion disorder, the Karolinska Exhaustion Disorder Scale. Scand J Psychol. 2014;55(1):72–82.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  44. Nelson SK, Kushlev K, Lyubomirsky S. The pains and pleasures of parenting: When, why, and how is parenthood associated with more or less well-being? Psychol Bull. 2014;140(3):846–95.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  45. Holden L, Hockey R, Ware RS, Lee C. Mental health-related quality of life and the timing of motherhood: a 16-year longitudinal study of a national cohort of young Australian women. Qual Life Res. 2018;27(4):923–35.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  46. Norman GR, Streiner DL. Biostatistics: the bare essentials. 4th ed. Shelton: People’s Medical Publishing House; 2014.

    Google Scholar 

  47. Belsley DA. A guide to using the collinearity diagnostics. Comput Sci Econ Manag. 1991;4:33–50.

    Google Scholar 

  48. Fritz CO, Morris PE, Richler JJ. Effect size estimates: current use, calculations, and interpretation. J Exp Psychol Gen. 2012;141(1):2–18.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  49. Bettinardi RG. ComputeCohen_d(x1,x2,varargin). MATLAB Central File Exchange; 2021.

  50. Mastekaasa A. Dependent children and women’s sicknes absence in the EU countries and Norway. Eur Soc. 2013;15(5):686–706.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  51. Luthar SS, Ciciolla L. Who mothers mommy? Factors that contribute to mothers’ well-being. Dev Psychol. 2015;51(12):1812–23.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  52. Alvsåg H. Kari Martinsen: Philosophy of Caring. In: Alligood MR, editor. Nursing theorists and their work. 9 ed. St Louis, Missouri: Elsevier; 2018.

  53. McMurtry M, Viswanath O, Cernich M, Strand N, Freeman J, Townsend C, et al. The impact of the quantity and quality of social support on patients with chronic pain. Curr Pain Headache Rep. 2020;24(11):72.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  54. Isaksson G, Skär L, Lexell J. Women’s perception of changes in the social network after a spinal cord injury. Disabil Rehabil. 2005;27(17):1013–21.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  55. Uchino BN. Social support and health: a review of physiological processes potentially underlying links to disease outcomes. J Behav Med. 2006;29(4):377–87.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  56. Molloy C, Beatson R, Harrop C, Perini N, Goldfeld S. Systematic review: effects of sustained nurse home visiting programs for disadvantaged mothers and children. J Adv Nurs. 2020;6:16.

    Google Scholar 

  57. Collins C. Making motherhood work: how women manage careers and caregiving. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 2019.

    Book  Google Scholar 

  58. Heinö AJ. Democracy between collectivism and individualism. De-nationalisation and individualisation in Swedish national identity. Int Rev Sociol. 2009;19(2):297–314.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  59. Luthar SS, Kumar NL, Benoit R. Toward fostering resilience on a large scale: connecting communities of caregivers. Dev Psychopathol. 2019;31(5):1813–25.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  60. Mikolajczak M, Raes M-E, Avalosse H, Roskam I. Exhausted parents: sociodemographic, child-related, parent-related, parenting and family-functioning correlates of parental burnout. J Child Fam Stud. 2018;27(2):602–14.

    Article  Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank all patients and students for their participation in the study and the clinic for its collaboration.

Funding

Open access funding provided by Karolinska Institutet. This study was supported by a grant from AFA Insurance (Grant No. 190012), an organization owned by Sweden’s labor market parties.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Contributions

MA, SA, and AG conceptualized the study design. AG collected the data, performed the analysis, and wrote the manuscript. AL supervised the analysis. Drafts were critically discussed and revised by all authors. All authors approved to submission. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Anja Gebhardt.

Ethics declarations

Ethics approval and consent to participate

Ethical approval for this study was obtained from the Swedish Ethical Review Authority (nr 2015/4:3, nr 2016/993-32 and nr 2018/1681-32). Participants gave their informed consent for study participation by submitting the survey. The study was performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and all methods were performed in accordance with the relevant guidelines and regulations.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors have no competing interests to declare.

Additional information

Publisher's Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Gebhardt, A., Langius-Eklöf, A., Andermo, S. et al. Health and suffering are associated with social support: a cross-sectional study of women and mothers with exhaustion and pain. BMC Women's Health 21, 259 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12905-021-01398-y

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12905-021-01398-y

Keywords