| Literature DB >> 29544463 |
Issam Bennis1,2,3, Vincent De Brouwere4, Zakaria Belrhiti5,4,6, Hamid Sahibi7, Marleen Boelaert4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (CL) is a parasitic skin disease, linked to poverty, and belonging to the group of Neglected Tropical Diseases. Depending on the severity, the type of lesions or scars, and the context, CL can lead to self- and social stigma influencing the quality of life and psychological well-being of the patient. This dimension is, however, little documented for the most common, localized form of cutaneous leishmaniasis (LCL). We aimed to describe the current knowledge on the psychological burden and the stigma related to LCL.Entities:
Keywords: Cicatrix; Cutaneous leishmaniasis; Psychology; Quality of life; Social stigma
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29544463 PMCID: PMC5855994 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5260-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flowchart of the number of literature searched and selected for psychosocial burden of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis
Studies included in this review by study design, study population characteristics and sample size
| Authors | Year of publication | Country of the study | Methods | Study design | Timing | Study Population | Sample size | Sex ratio (M/F) | Age range (years) | Patients with CL scars included |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Kamel et al. | 2017 | Yemen | Qualitative | Interview | May 2016 | CL patients | 11 | 0.10 | 12–60 | Yes |
| Bennis et al. | 2017 | Morocco | Qualitative | Questionnaire | April 2015 | Boarding school students | 448 | 1.36 | 16–20 | Yes |
| Chahed et al. | 2016 | Tunisia | Quantitative | Questionnaire survey (scale) | Not defined | Women with CL scar | 41 | All female | 12–53 | Yes |
| Ramdas et al. | 2016 | Surinam | Qualitative | Ethnography | Sep 09 to Dec 10 | CL patients. General population | 205CL patient & 321 people | 8.3 & 1.4 | 20–49 | Yes |
| Turan et al. | 2015 | Turkey | Quantitative | Questionnaire survey (scale) | May 11 to Apr 13 | Paediatric CL patients and healthy controls | 54 CL patients | 1.16 | 7–18 | No |
| Handjani et al. | 2013 | Iran | Quantitative | Questionnaire survey (scale) | 2013 | Relatives of dermatological cases | 50 relatives | 0.85 | 20–65 | No |
| Vares et al. | 2013 | Iran | Quantitative | Questionnaire survey (scale) | Not defined | CL patients | 124 | 0.59 | 16–80 | Yes |
| Abazid et al. | 2010 | Syria | Quantitative | KAP-survey | Nov 06 to Oct 07 | CL patients or the caregiver seeking treat | 70 | 0.46 | ≈32 | No |
| Fernando et al. | 2010 | Sri Lanka | Quantitative | KAP-survey | Sep 06 to Feb 08 | CL patients | 120 | 2.75 | 02–70 | No |
| Nilforoushzadeh et al. | 2010 | Iran | Quantitative | RCT | 2007 | Female CL patients | 2 groups of 20 | All female | > 10 | No |
| Kassi et al. | 2008 | Afghanistan | Qualitative | Case report | Not defined | Woman with CL scar | 1 | All female | 28 | Yes |
| Simsek et al. | 2008 | Turkey | Quantitative | Questionnaire survey (scale) | 2006 | Women in general population | 247 | All female | 15–47 | Yes |
| Reithinger et al. | 2005 | Afghanistan | Mixed | KAP & FGD | Oct 2002 | KAP: household head; FGD: women | KAP: 252; FGD: 108 | FGD All female | Not defined | Yes |
| Yanik et al. | 2004 | Turkey | Quantitative | Questionnaire survey (scale) | Sep 02 to Aug 03 | CL patients, persons with CL scar, healthy controls | 3 groups of 33 | 1:1 | 12–35 | Yes |
| Reyburn et al. | 2000 | Afghanistan | Qualitative | FGD | Feb to Jul 1998 | CL patients and unaffected spouses | 8 groups of 6 to 10 | 1:1 | ≈28 | Yes |
Overview of the quantitative studies included in this review based on scales questionnaire surveys
| Reference | Measurement scales of psychological, social and QoL burdens | Main findings |
|---|---|---|
| Chahed-2016 | Revised Illness Perception Questionnaire (IPQ-R), World Health Organization Quality of Life-26 (WHOQOL-26) | Large range of negative psychological consequences of LCL it is a source of constant stress and shame. Leading to social rejection and anticipation/ avoidance behaviour. |
| Turan-2015 | The Child Depression Inventory (CDI) | Depression scores were significantly higher in children and adolescents with CL compared to age-matched controls. No significant difference was found in anxiety scores. Depression scores were also higher in mother of children with LCL. |
| Handjani-2013 | Family Dermatology Life Quality Index (FDLQI) | Family members of LCL cases face reduction in QoL, mainly due to the time they have to spent looking after the patient |
| Vares-2013 | Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) | The type of LCL lesion determines the degree of QoL reduction. Most reduced in ulcers, least in papular LCL |
| Nilforoushzadeh-2010 | Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) | The effect of adjunct psychotherapy to drug treatment on QoL was tested in a randomized controlled trial on women with LCL. QoL was improved in the intervention group. |
| Simsek-2008 | The Turkish version of the Structured Clinical Interview for Axes I of the DSM-IV (SCID-I) | This study on mental health of women in rural Turkey identified CL as one of the main independent predictors of mental disorders |
| Yanik-2004 | Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale (HAD), | Depression and anxiety are higher in LCL compared to control. Impaired body satisfaction in LCL. LCL have reduced QoL compared to LCL scars and controls. |
Overview of the included studies analysed qualitatively
| 1st Author name, Year of publication and country of the study. | Types of stigma noticed | Types of psychological consequences related to CL | Reasons for stigma | Reasons for Psychosocial burden |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Kamel-2017 (Yemen) | Social stigma Aesthetic stigma Psychological stigma | Stress Depression Anxiousness Shame | Socially isolated | Feels shame. Fears of infecting their children and infecting others through food and drink. Fears of deformity, disability and death. Fear of malignancy. |
| Bennis-2017 (Morocco) | Self-stigma Social stigma | Large spectrum of negative psychosocial effects: Anxiety, Embarrassment, Sadness, Shame, Suicidal ideas | Social stigma (Family relationships, social contempt, fear, marriage difficulties, avoidance by others). Self-stigma (embarrassment, shame, sadness, anxiety, depression, suicidal ideas) | Emergence of psychological consequences due to perceived stigma. |
| Chahed-2016 (Tunisia) | Social exclusion and stigmatization | Loss of self-esteem, feelings of inferiority and the idea that the disease is an obvious social disadvantage. There was also a strong sense of shame. | The nature of stigma that patients experience is associated with certain general fears and anticipation of rejection, rather than the actual rejection that patient truly experience from society. It reduced marriage prospects for men (75%) and women (59%). ZCL had no positive effects on their lives. The consequences have rather been negative. About 73% suffered social exclusion and stigmatization. Their relationships have been broken and they face more interpersonal conflicts in society, regardless of the context (family, social or professional). The consequences were seen also in their chances of getting employment | Respondents are dissatisfied with their self-image and appearance. Scars alter women’s beauty (58%) Drugs were seen to have little or no effect, and the risk of getting the disease again is likely. The more a person looks at the world anticipating segregation and rejection, the more they perceive ZCL as a disease with harmful effects on them-The more they see it as a mysterious and incomprehensible illness, and the more they talk about suffering and emotional difficulties. |
| Ramdas-2016 (Surinam) | Aesthetic stigma In the literature: 1) experienced or enacted stigma; | 38 CL patients who reported having experienced negative reactions related to CL expressed feeling bad about their looks. Some said they were “disgusted” by their sores, others reported feeling “shy” or “ashamed”. | Health related stigma is linked to patients’ own illness experiences’ | These feelings were experienced when sores became bigger, or when they had multiple sores. The gruesome appearance of CL sores contributed to patients’ fear of the disease. Aside from a sore’s appearance, the growth of a sore, the increase in number of sores, and their visibility could also cause overt negative reactions from those in a patient’s environment. |
| Reyburn-2000 (Afghanistan) | Enacted stigma Feeling rejection and isolation | Some women expressed anger at the situation Felling bring shame to the whole family. One girl said that she sometimes felt suicidal. | Women tended to express feelings of rejection and isolation more frequently than men Widespread and inappropriate fear of direct or indirect transmission of CL to others. Fear of contagion and an association with dirt, low personal hygiene, sinfulness and disgust. If you commit a sin or you have done something wrong, you will get the punishment from God later on. An insulting word, “soldana” was commonly reported to be used for CL sufferers, leading to a general feeling of victimization. Some respondents were required to eat separately from the family with his/her own plate, cup, utensils and not to share a bed with healthy family-members. Women with CL often reported that they were not allowed to cook for the family. Had lost authority or felt disempowered from interacting in public or managing their affairs. It seemed that the perceived need to isolate CL sufferers from others readily developed into a more personal rejection. | One of the major concerns for young people, especially women, was their appearance and adherence to an ideal of beauty. CL was felt to seriously undermine their prospects for marriage. Both active lesions and scars were a concern, particularly on the face. Several men reported that leishmaniasis caused problems in taking their ablutions and staying ritually clean throughout the prayer. They felt that others saw them as unclean and they were deterred from praying at the mosque. |
Fig. 2Time adjustment of stigma types and psychosocial impact of unwanted skin conditions adapted from Deacon & al [34]; Weiss [27]; and Thompson & al [62] applied to Localised cutaneous leishmaniasis (LCL)