| Literature DB >> 27799808 |
Catherine M Nguyen1, Kourosh Beroukhim2, Melissa J Danesh3, Aline Babikian4, John Koo3, Argentina Leon3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Chronic skin conditions have been well reported to affect a patient's quality of life on multiple dimensions, including the psychosocial domain. Psychosocial is defined as the interrelation of social factors with an individual's thoughts and behavior. The assessment of the psychosocial impact of skin disease on a patient can help direct the dermatologists' treatment goals. To evaluate the psychosocial impact of skin disease, we conducted a review of the literature on three skin conditions with onsets at various stages of life: acne, vitiligo, and psoriasis.Entities:
Keywords: acne; psoriasis; psychosocial; vitiligo
Year: 2016 PMID: 27799808 PMCID: PMC5076546 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S76088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Summary of papers reviewed and their findings, organized by disease discussed
| Author | Title | Year | Size | Survey | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sangma et al | Quality of life and psychological morbidity in patients with vitiligo: a study in a teaching hospital from north-East India | 2015 | n=100 | DLQI, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale | Married females have a lower quality of life than married males due to discrimination and in-law relationships |
| Pahw et al | The psychosocial impact of vitiligo in Indian patients | 2013 | n=50 | Interview | Patients were unhappy with the way they now looked and seriously undermined the way they felt about themselves |
| Alghamdi et al | Public perceptions and attitudes toward vitiligo | 2012 | n=924 | Questionnaire | 33.1% believe vitiligo is contagious, 56.1% do not want to marry a patient with vitiligo |
| Wang et al | Health-related quality of life and marital quality of vitiligo patients in China | 2011 | n=101 | DLQI, SF-36, ENRICH | >50% of patients report relationship problems with the opposite sex; most feel trouble and shame when meeting a stranger or beginning a sexual or emotional relation with a new partner 16% of patients with vitiligo reported sexual problems, while 25%–35% had classical symptoms of depression, such as loss of sexual drive |
| Thompson et al | Vitiligo linked to stigmatization in British South Asian women: a qualitative study of the experiences of living with vitiligo | 2010 | n=7 | Face-to-face or e-mail interview | Vitiligo is seen to negatively affect social acceptability and marriage potential |
| Talsania et al | Vitiligo is more than skin deep: a survey of members of the Vitiligo Society | 2010 | n=520 | Questionnaire | Fear of getting sunburned on the affected body areas can have major effects on behavior and social participation |
| Sampogna et al | Impact of different skin conditions on quality of life | 2013 | n=2478 | Skindex-29 (sx) | Patients with vitiligo have low symptom impairment but high psychosocial impairment |
| Krishna et al | Vitiligo impact scale: an instrument to assess the psychosocial burden of vitiligo | 2013 | n=100 | VIS | Validation of VIS: scores on the scale as a whole and responses to individual items can serve as a guide for treatment decisions including psychological intervention |
| Chan et al | Investigating factors associated with depression of patients with vitiligo in Singapore | 2011 | n=145 | Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, DLQI | Patients with vitiligo affected in both quality of life and self-esteem, which is particularly negatively affected |
| Alghamdi | Beliefs and perceptions of Arab patients with vitiligo regarding their condition | 2010 | n=164 | Illness perception questionnaire | >50% of patients reported depression when they think about their illness |
| Marron et al | Anxiety, depression, quality of life and patient satisfaction in patients with acne treated with oral isotretinoin | 2013 | n=334 | DLQI, Health SF-36, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | Baseline DLQI 13.2 that is more negative than the general population |
| Tasoula et al | The impact of acne vulgaris on quality of life and psychic health in young adolescents in Greece. Results of a population survey | 2012 | n=1531 | DLQI, CDLQI | 21% of the acne adolescents were affected in their school work and personal activities due to acne |
| Shahzad et al | Frequency and psychosocial impact of acne on university and college students | 2011 | n=950 | CADI | Mean CADI score was 2.67±5.35 |
| Bez et al | High social phobia frequency and related disability in patients with acne vulgaris | 2011 | n=140 | LSAS, HADS, Sheehan Disability Scale, interview by psychiatrist | Social phobia was diagnosed in 45.7% of patients with acne vulgaris and in 18.4% of control subjects: social phobia diagnosis predicted disability at work |
| Roosta et al | Skin disease and stigma in emerging adulthood: impact on healthy development | 2010 | n=336 | Web-based survey | Likelihood of experiencing perceived stigma was 3.19 times higher for those with acne compared to those without acne |
| Kubota et al | Community-based epidemiological study of psychosocial effects of acne in Japanese adolescents | 2010 | n=859 | MHI or SF-36 | Students with acne were significantly more depressed than those without skin problems Girls were significantly more depressed than boys |
| Alexis et al | Development of a new patient-reported outcome measure for facial acne: the Acne Symptom and Impact Scale (ASIS) | 2014 | n=48 | Acne Symptom and Impact Scale | The most frequently reported impacts were impacts on appearance, self-consciousness, annoyance, bothersomeness, mood, social criticism, embarrassment, confidence, and social withdrawal |
| Callender et al | Racial differences in clinical characteristics, perceptions and behaviors, and psychosocial impact of adult female acne | 2014 | n=208 | Patient Health Questionnaire | Depression rates were similar among White/Caucasian vs non-White/Caucasian patients More White/Caucasian patients felt self-conscious around other people |
| Darwish et al | Knowledge, beliefs, and psychosocial effect of acne vulgaris among Saudi patients with acne | 2013 | n=160 | Questionnaire | 13.3%, affected schoolwork performance |
| Pruthi et al | Physical and psychosocial impact of acne in adult females | 2012 | n=11 | Open-ended questions | Indian women believed that physical attractiveness increased ability to secure jobs and life partners |
| Ritvo et al | Psychosocial judgements and perceptions of adolescents with acne vulgaris: a blinded, controlled comparison of adult and peer evaluations | 2011 | n=1,002 | Questionnaire | Social bullying was perceived to be greater in patients with acne |
| Martinez-Garcia et al | Quality of life in persons living with patients with psoriasis | 2014 | n=130 | DLQI, FDLQI, HADS | 87.8% of the cohabitants with patients with psoriasis had impaired quality of life |
| Cather | Psoriasis in children and women: addressing some special needs | 2014 | n=60 | Interview | In women <35 years of age, the likelihood of pregnancy was 22% lower than the average, nondiseased population |
| Bewley et al | Identifying individual psychosocial and adherence support needs in patients with psoriasis: a multinational two-stage qualitative and quantitative study | 2014 | n=1,884 | Survey | Depressive symptoms associated with psoriasis have in turn been associated with health-impairing behavior patterns such as smoking, drinking, and decreased physical activity or obesity |
| Sampogna et al | Impact of different skin conditions on quality of life | 2013 | n=2,478 | Skindex-29 (sx) | Patients with psoriasis had high symptom impairment and high psychosocial impairment |
| Chularojanamontri et al | The Simplified Psoriasis Index (SPI): a practical tool for assessing psoriasis | 2013 | n=150 | DLQI, SPI | The close correlation between SPI-p (psychosocial domain) and DLQI in our study confirms that SPI-p is a good instrument for assessing the psychological impact of psoriasis |
| Anstey et al | Extending psychosocial assessment of patients with psoriasis in the UK, using a self-rated, web-based survey | 2012 | n=1,760 | Web-based survey | Important social issues highlighted were a lack of understanding of psoriasis by the public, avoidance, or limitation of social activities |
| Sampogna et al | Living with psoriasis: prevalence of shame, anger, worry, and problems in daily activities and social life | 2012 | n=936 | Skindex-29 | Stigma affecting social domains such as relationships, social activities, and work |
| Armstrong et al | Quality of life and work productivity impairment among patients with psoriasis: findings from the National Psoriasis Foundation survey data 2003–2011 | 2012 | n=5,604 | Survey | 12% of patients were unemployed 92% of those unemployed cited psoriasis as the sole cause for unemployment |
Abbreviations: DLQI, Dermatology Life Quality Index; SF-36, Short Form-36; VIS, Vitiligo Impact Scale; SD, standard deviation; CADI, Cardiff Acne Disability Index; LSAS, Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; MHI, Mental Health Inventory; ASIS, Acne Symptom and Impact Scale; FDLQI, Family Dermatology Life Quality Index; SPI, Simplified Psoriasis Index; CDLQI, Children’s Dermatology Life Quality Index; ENRICH, evaluating and nurturing relationship issues, communication, happiness.
Erickson stages of development outline the psychosocial conflict and primary relationships formed in each age group
| Age group | Psychosocial conflict | Primary relationships formed |
|---|---|---|
| Adolescent (12–18 years old) | Identity vs confusion | Peers |
| Young adulthood (20–25 years old) | Intimacy vs isolation | Friends and lovers |
| Middle adulthood (26–64 years old) | Generativity vs stagnation | Family and society |