Anticipated and Perceived Stigma Among Patients With Psoriasis

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Abstract

Background: Perceived stigma among patients with psoriasis (PWP) is associated with poorer quality of life. Objective: To determine the prevalence and predictors of stigmatizing attitudes that PWP expect and experience from others. Methods: We conducted a survey using validated outcome measures to assess the extent to which PWP anticipate and perceive stigma from others. Demographic and clinical characteristics were obtained from electronic medical records. Results: Patients (n = 106) were 48.11% female, 70.75% white, and had a mean age ± SD of 47.90 ± 16.19 years old. Of all, 25.47% self-reported their psoriasis as severe. Mean physician global assessment score ± SD was 2.98 ± 1.81. Two-thirds (66.98%) of patients reported that, in response to seeing their psoriasis-affected skin, they anticipated others to stereotype them as “contagious.” Linear regression analyses demonstrated that patient-reported severe psoriasis, compared to mild psoriasis, was associated with greater anticipation of negative stereotypes, social avoidance, and perceived stigma from others (P values

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Wan, M. T., Pearl, R. L., Fuxench, Z. C. C., Takeshita, J., & Gelfand, J. M. (2020). Anticipated and Perceived Stigma Among Patients With Psoriasis. Journal of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis, 5(3), 93–99. https://doi.org/10.1177/2475530320924009

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